Over at J.B. Hunt Transport Services, another low-ratio enterprise according to the new data for 2017, CEO John Roberts only grabbed $859,000 last year, just 15 times the pay of the median J.B. Hunt worker. But Roberts had been grabbing annual pay packages in the $5 million range before last year, and earlier this year, in January, the company granted Roberts additional shares valued at $4,877,428. So that 15-to-1 ratio reported for 2017 appears more than a little misleading. This year will see Roberts back at his $5 million level, about 100 times what his typical workers are making.
What about the other companies on our low-ratio list? Nearly half don’t at all resemble typical publicly traded corporations. They enjoy special tax or regulatory treatment. Some states, for instance, have regulatory limitations on how much top utility executives can make. Our list of low-ratio firms includes two utility holding companies
Two of the other companies on the list qualify as real estate investment trusts. These trusts typically contract out most of their labor to property management companies. Their actual employee workforces tend to be small, highly educated, and highly paid. The median pay at HCP, one of the real estate investment trusts on our list, stood at $181,076 in 2017.
HCP CEO Thomas Herzog, according to the new pay-ratio disclosures, took home $7.3 million in 2017, 40 times more than that median worker. But that ratio significantly understates the inequality a company like HCP can generate, as we can see from a close reading of the 2017 HCP annual report.
This report notes that HCP expects to record charges of $9 million for severance pay and other items related to the previously announced departure of HCP executive chairman Mike McKee, who had served as the company’s CEO before Herzog. In 2016, HCP also paid a large severance package to a departing CEO.
What does all this mean? HCP’s executive compensation package apparently includes a healthy severance bonus that’s not reflected in its CEO pay package in any given year.
Other companies on our low-ratio list also have atypically small worker populations.
So we end up with several unique reasons that explain the low CEO-worker pay ratios of the companies on our low-ratio list. We have CEOs whose upside potential from stock ownership renders their actual annual compensation practically meaningless. We have CEOs whose 2017 pay dropped significantly from their normal annual levels. We have CEOs at companies that face special tax or regulatory treatment. We have corporations with small, highly paid workforces.
The bottom line? Sift through the list of corporations with low CEO-to-worker pay ratios and you’ll find nothing that contradicts the stark reality — reflected in the pay ratios of the great majority of publicly traded corporations — of a horrifically unequal society where those at the top nearly always earn more in a single week than their workers earn over the course of an entire year.
Institute for Policy Studies associate fellow Bob Lord practices tax law in Phoenix.