男友太凶猛1v1高h,大地资源在线资源免费观看 ,人妻少妇精品视频二区,极度sm残忍bdsm变态

Make me your Homepage
left corner left corner
China Daily Website

Paid too much? Or too little?

Updated: 2013-12-10 07:34
By Yang Ziman and Zheng Yangpeng ( China Daily)

Are executives of China's State-owned enterprises paid too much? It's a question that often sparks heated, even emotional discussions.

The private sector has been critical of SOEs, which dominate their fields yet pay their managers huge sums. Then again, many studies and media reports compare the absolute salaries at Chinese SOEs against their overseas counterparts, leading to the conclusion that Chinese SOE managers are underpaid.

A research team led by Gao Minghua, director of the research institute on corporate management at Beijing Normal University, declined to offer a simple "yes" or "no" to the question.

Instead, the team turned to an ocean of data, analyzing more than 2,300 A-share companies and their senior managers' salaries.

The conclusion is that the managers are paid both too much and too little.

Putting senior managers' packages into three categories - excessive, moderate and insufficient - the research team found that nearly 30 percent of the sampled companies pay their managers either excessively or insufficiently.

The basic idea behind the assessment is, you deserve what you've earned. If you generated much profit for the company, it is fair for you to get more.

In this light, even though executives at listed financial institutions in 2012 earned 3.85 times as much as those at non-financial listed companies, it wasn't unfair: The average profitability of public financial institutions was 9.04 times that of non-financial companies.

Another example is BP Plc and China Petroleum and Chemical Corp (Sinopec). Each generated about $380 billion in operating profit in 2012. But there was a large gap between their net profits, with $25.7 billion for BP, 2.72 times the $9.5 billion generated by Sinopec.

Moreover, BP is exposed to full competition without any government support. Sinopec, on the other hand, enjoys monopoly resources that private companies can't dream of.

"A simple approach of comparing the absolute level of their managers' compensation is meaningless," said Gao.

Surprisingly, among the top 100 companies the team studied that had "excessive" incentives, 86 turned out to be private companies.

Hidden compensation

"Some of the compensation for SOE leaders is hidden," explained Cai Jiming, professor of political economics at Tsinghua University. "Entertainment and transportation expenses aren't publicly disclosed," said Cai.

"The profits of SOEs are generated by four resources: policy privileges, natural resource monopolies, operationing income and risks," said Liu Yingqiu, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a central government think tank.

"The compensation of their leaders should come solely from operating income and risks. Returns attributable to policy privileges and natural resource monopolies should be reported as fiscal income."

In another report measuring listed companies' financial governance, only 917, or 39.6 percent, had scores higher than 60 points.

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

 
8.03K
 
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 普宁市| 徐州市| 建德市| 玛曲县| 集安市| 亚东县| 汽车| 长兴县| 大竹县| 内丘县| 分宜县| 琼中| 句容市| 阜康市| 横峰县| 泸水县| 昌宁县| 仲巴县| 湘潭县| 丹江口市| 冕宁县| 汝城县| 营山县| 惠来县| 蒙阴县| 西乌珠穆沁旗| 三台县| 炎陵县| 虞城县| 金乡县| 偃师市| 大余县| 瑞安市| 普兰县| 霍山县| 博野县| 平罗县| 惠州市| 上饶市| 赫章县| 石城县|