Chief executive officer compensation sensitivity in the South African mining industry

Orientation: The level of chief executive officer (CEO) compensation and its relationship with organisational performance has generated considerable interest worldwide. In light of compromised mining productivity as a result of the recent labour unrest in South Africa, some commentators have questio...

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Main Author: Mark Bussin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2018-07-01
Series:Acta Commercii
Subjects:
Online Access:https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/573
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spelling doaj-55697479978e403698e804c4851d46d62020-11-25T00:56:08ZengAOSISActa Commercii2413-19031684-19992018-07-01181e1e1310.4102/ac.v18i1.573320Chief executive officer compensation sensitivity in the South African mining industryMark Bussin0Gordon Institute of Business Science, University of PretoriaOrientation: The level of chief executive officer (CEO) compensation and its relationship with organisational performance has generated considerable interest worldwide. In light of compromised mining productivity as a result of the recent labour unrest in South Africa, some commentators have questioned the justification of certain CEO compensation in the country’s mining industry. Research purpose: The primary purpose of this study was to describe the relationship between CEO compensation and organisational performance in the South African mining industry. Motivation for the study: A deeper understanding of the relationship would enhance knowledge when developing optimal CEO reward systems to ensure sustainability of the mining industry within the South African context. Research design, approach and method: The research was a quantitative, archival study involving 30 mining companies over a 5-year period. The statistical analysis techniques used in the study included analysis of normality variance and multivariate regression. Main findings: The main finding of the research was that there was a moderate to strong relationship between CEO compensation and organisational performance in the South African mining industry. However, operating expenses have progressively increased, putting performance under pressure. Furthermore, it was also found that organisation size plays an influential role in CEO compensation levels. Practical/managerial implications: While the CEO compensation appears to be generally aligned with the organisational performance, the findings suggest that boards of directors should focus on structuring reward systems more optimally to mitigate managerial rent seeking in large companies and unsustainability in smaller companies. Contribution/value-add: This study has contributed to the body of existing knowledge on executive pay for performance in the context of the South African mining industry. In addition, the study has demonstrated that the other measures related to non-performance need to be considered in executive compensation design. The study adds practical value in contributing to information for engagements with stakeholders such as organised labour on executive pay.https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/573CEO compensationremunerationmining industryperformance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Bussin
spellingShingle Mark Bussin
Chief executive officer compensation sensitivity in the South African mining industry
Acta Commercii
CEO compensation
remuneration
mining industry
performance
author_facet Mark Bussin
author_sort Mark Bussin
title Chief executive officer compensation sensitivity in the South African mining industry
title_short Chief executive officer compensation sensitivity in the South African mining industry
title_full Chief executive officer compensation sensitivity in the South African mining industry
title_fullStr Chief executive officer compensation sensitivity in the South African mining industry
title_full_unstemmed Chief executive officer compensation sensitivity in the South African mining industry
title_sort chief executive officer compensation sensitivity in the south african mining industry
publisher AOSIS
series Acta Commercii
issn 2413-1903
1684-1999
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Orientation: The level of chief executive officer (CEO) compensation and its relationship with organisational performance has generated considerable interest worldwide. In light of compromised mining productivity as a result of the recent labour unrest in South Africa, some commentators have questioned the justification of certain CEO compensation in the country’s mining industry. Research purpose: The primary purpose of this study was to describe the relationship between CEO compensation and organisational performance in the South African mining industry. Motivation for the study: A deeper understanding of the relationship would enhance knowledge when developing optimal CEO reward systems to ensure sustainability of the mining industry within the South African context. Research design, approach and method: The research was a quantitative, archival study involving 30 mining companies over a 5-year period. The statistical analysis techniques used in the study included analysis of normality variance and multivariate regression. Main findings: The main finding of the research was that there was a moderate to strong relationship between CEO compensation and organisational performance in the South African mining industry. However, operating expenses have progressively increased, putting performance under pressure. Furthermore, it was also found that organisation size plays an influential role in CEO compensation levels. Practical/managerial implications: While the CEO compensation appears to be generally aligned with the organisational performance, the findings suggest that boards of directors should focus on structuring reward systems more optimally to mitigate managerial rent seeking in large companies and unsustainability in smaller companies. Contribution/value-add: This study has contributed to the body of existing knowledge on executive pay for performance in the context of the South African mining industry. In addition, the study has demonstrated that the other measures related to non-performance need to be considered in executive compensation design. The study adds practical value in contributing to information for engagements with stakeholders such as organised labour on executive pay.
topic CEO compensation
remuneration
mining industry
performance
url https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/573
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