This study documents the danger of limiting the coverage of mandatory pay disclosure. Exploiting the 2013 rule change in Korea, we find that its restrictive coverage, confined to board members with total annual pay exceeding 500 million Korean won, led a large fraction of executives to evade disclosure through deregistration (i.e., stepping down from the board) or pay-cuts.
We also find that such evasion is mostly carried out by family executives in firms with high executive-to-worker pay ratios. If the original pay level is close to the threshold, we find that family executives choose pay-cuts over deregistration, as their preferred means of evasion.
This study examines the effect of outside director tenure length on firms’ market valuation and the voting behavior of outside directors. We make use...
ESG funds are not all equal: there is significant heterogeneity in incentives of fund managers to engage with portfolio firms. We argue that differences...