2016
DOI: 10.1093/ajcl/avw007
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Why Does Executive Greed Prevail in the United States and Canada but Not in Japan? The Pattern of Low CEO Pay and High Worker Welfare in Japanese Corporations

Abstract: Abstract:According to a list of the 200 most highly-paid chief executives at the largest U.S. public companies in 2013, Oracle's Lawrence J. Ellison remained the best paid CEO and earned $96.2 million as total annual compensation last year. He has received $1.8 billion over the past 20 years. The lowest paid on the same list is General Motors' D. F. Akerson who earned $11.1 million. The average national pay for a non-supervisory US worker was $51,200 last year and a CEO made 354 times more than an average work… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Our results show that CEO greed negatively correlates with CSR performance (p = 0.10). The findings support the notion that upper echelons use their position to follow their self-interest (Salazar and Raggiunti 2016). They forego CSR as a strategic choice to fill their greed.…”
Section: Discussion Of Main Findingssupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Our results show that CEO greed negatively correlates with CSR performance (p = 0.10). The findings support the notion that upper echelons use their position to follow their self-interest (Salazar and Raggiunti 2016). They forego CSR as a strategic choice to fill their greed.…”
Section: Discussion Of Main Findingssupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Clark (1979) implies that the notion of teamwork indicates the crucial theme that employee welfare holds in Japanese firms. More recently, Salazar and Raggiunti (2016) suggest that lower executive compensation does not discourage firm performance, but it is actually a necessary ingredient in building corporations friendly to stakeholders including employees. In summary, if we accept the premise that granting EBC to CEOs motivates those CEOs to increase firm performance, we posit that EBC could lead CEOs to suppress employee wages to reach this goal.…”
Section: Equity-based Compensation and Employee Wagesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In some industries, such as the oil and iron industries, the compensations of the top executives reach more than 40 times of the national average pay of the workers (Bae et al, 2019). Even though the pay gap between top executives and average workers is more severe in IJMF 20,3 US, where CEOs are sometimes paid as much as 354 times more than their employees as of 2012 (Salazar and Raggiunti, 2016), the Chinese media argue that top executives of certain central state-owned enterprises (CSOEs) do not deserve this significant compensation. Since the level of CEO compensation in such CSOEs does not match the relatively low operational risks of their companies.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%