Corporate governance, CEO compensation and total shareholder returns in South Africa

Magister Commercii - MCom === The on-going displeasure displayed by the media and business commentators, relating to apparent excessive and unwarranted executive directors' salaries, has increased since the financial turmoil experienced in 2008. The commentaries and reports suggest that corpora...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Priem, Colin Michael
Other Authors: Brown, Warren
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/5586
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-5586
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-55862017-09-29T16:01:30Z Corporate governance, CEO compensation and total shareholder returns in South Africa Priem, Colin Michael Brown, Warren Corporate governance CEO compensation Agency problem Total shareholder returns South Africa Board composition Magister Commercii - MCom The on-going displeasure displayed by the media and business commentators, relating to apparent excessive and unwarranted executive directors' salaries, has increased since the financial turmoil experienced in 2008. The commentaries and reports suggest that corporate governance interventions are not strong enough to curb the excessive remuneration packages awarded to executives and specifically to Chief Executive Officers (CEOs). The purpose of the research is to examine the factors that determine and/or shape the relationship between the Chief Executive Officer's (CEO's) compensation and the wealth created for shareholders. The investigation further seeks to find the corporate governance elements, systems and processes that assist in monitoring the CEO's remuneration and performance contract. The null hypothesis is that poor corporate governance prevails in South African listed companies resulting in CEO compensation not being aligned to shareholder wealth creation. The aim is to establish the effectiveness of South African listed companies' adherence to corporate governance measures in addressing the principal/agent problem, commonly referred to as the agency problem. The research embraces a sample of the top 100 actively trading companies listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) using secondary data. The study builds on existing theories and provides knowledge from a South African perspective. 2017-09-19T14:52:33Z 2017-09-19T14:52:33Z 2016 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/5586 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Corporate governance
CEO compensation
Agency problem
Total shareholder returns
South Africa
Board composition
spellingShingle Corporate governance
CEO compensation
Agency problem
Total shareholder returns
South Africa
Board composition
Priem, Colin Michael
Corporate governance, CEO compensation and total shareholder returns in South Africa
description Magister Commercii - MCom === The on-going displeasure displayed by the media and business commentators, relating to apparent excessive and unwarranted executive directors' salaries, has increased since the financial turmoil experienced in 2008. The commentaries and reports suggest that corporate governance interventions are not strong enough to curb the excessive remuneration packages awarded to executives and specifically to Chief Executive Officers (CEOs). The purpose of the research is to examine the factors that determine and/or shape the relationship between the Chief Executive Officer's (CEO's) compensation and the wealth created for shareholders. The investigation further seeks to find the corporate governance elements, systems and processes that assist in monitoring the CEO's remuneration and performance contract. The null hypothesis is that poor corporate governance prevails in South African listed companies resulting in CEO compensation not being aligned to shareholder wealth creation. The aim is to establish the effectiveness of South African listed companies' adherence to corporate governance measures in addressing the principal/agent problem, commonly referred to as the agency problem. The research embraces a sample of the top 100 actively trading companies listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) using secondary data. The study builds on existing theories and provides knowledge from a South African perspective.
author2 Brown, Warren
author_facet Brown, Warren
Priem, Colin Michael
author Priem, Colin Michael
author_sort Priem, Colin Michael
title Corporate governance, CEO compensation and total shareholder returns in South Africa
title_short Corporate governance, CEO compensation and total shareholder returns in South Africa
title_full Corporate governance, CEO compensation and total shareholder returns in South Africa
title_fullStr Corporate governance, CEO compensation and total shareholder returns in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Corporate governance, CEO compensation and total shareholder returns in South Africa
title_sort corporate governance, ceo compensation and total shareholder returns in south africa
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/5586
work_keys_str_mv AT priemcolinmichael corporategovernanceceocompensationandtotalshareholderreturnsinsouthafrica
_version_ 1718541047886249984