Jon Weinstein is a Managing Partner and Blaine Martin is Consultant at Pay Governance LLC. This post is based on a Pay Governance publication.
Spring is in the air, and executive compensation consultants are busy reading a cascade of public filings and proxy advisor reports as we analyze and are asked to predict trends in executive pay in 2017 and beyond. One of the most common questions in executive compensation this year concerns what will become of the Dodd-Frank mandated CEO pay ratio set to be disclosed publicly for most companies beginning with proxies filed in 2018—if not delayed or overturned beforehand. Earlier this year, acting Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Michael Piwowar took the unusual step of requesting additional comments on the cost and burden of complying with the already approved CEO pay ratio rule, which would require companies to disclose the ratio of CEO pay to that of the median employee. Adding to this uncertainty, the Choice Act 2.0 (currently out of Committee in the House of Representatives) would repeal the CEO pay ratio disclosure requirement if approved by the full House, Senate, and White House. While the future is cloudy regarding the implementation of the Dodd-Frank pay ratio rule in 2018, we note that nine state and city governments have proposed some form of tax code change or local ordinance that would base local income taxation or licensing fees on a public company’s CEO pay ratio.
Portland and Piketty
While multiple jurisdictions have proposed legislation tying local tax rates to a company’s CEO pay ratio, Portland is currently the only one to approve a proposal. The Portland city ordinance begins by quoting Thomas Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century, and goes on to clarify the ordinance’s aspirations to influence legislation throughout the country as well as corporate governance:
“The spectacular concentration of income and wealth among the top 1 percent and 0.1% is bad for the economy and bad for democracy. If other jurisdictions follow Portland’s lead in enacting policies based on the Securities and Exchange Commission disclosure, shareholders may realize that extreme chief executive officer to median worker pay ratios reduce their profits and, with this result in mind, make changes to their pay structure.”
Technically, the Portland ordinance (if ultimately implemented) would impose a two-tier surtax on the local 2.2% city business income tax for tax years beginning in 2017:
- Companies with SEC-disclosed CEO pay ratios between 100 and 250 times the median employee would be subject to a 10% surtax (an additional 10% of the existing 2.2% tax liability).
- Companies with SEC-disclosed CEO pay ratios above 250 times the median employee would be subject to a 25% surtax.
It is unclear how the tax would be administered or how the local ordinance would be affected by a repeal of the Dodd-Frank CEO pay ratio. For example, would the surtax be levied on companies’ 2017 income after proxies potentially disclosing the CEO pay ratio are published in the first half of 2018, or would the surtax affect the current tax year?
Similar Proposals in other Cities and States
A number of other jurisdictions have followed Portland’s model of using the CEO pay ratio, or a similar measure of company wage differentials, as a potential factor in state or local income tax rates:
- Rhode Island and Minnesota have proposed bills that are modeled closely on the Portland ordinance, and a similar measure failed in Committee earlier this year in Hawaii. San Francisco has a proposed—but yet-undrafted—ordinance in the works that would likely be similar to Portland’s surtax on the city business license tax.
- A proposal in Illinois would charge an additional annual fee of $1,500 for companies with Dodd-Frank CEO pay ratios between 100 and 250 times the median employee, and $2,500 for companies with CEO pay ratios above 250 times the median employee.
- A proposal in Massachusetts would apply a 2% additional state income tax (not a surtax) for any company in which the CEO is paid more than 100 times the median US employee (different from the Dodd-Frank pay ratio methodology).
- A proposal in Connecticut would apply a sliding scale of business income tax based on the ratio of the highest-paid employee (not necessarily the CEO) to median employee compensation. Tax rates vary from 5% for a pay ratio of 25 times the median or lower to 25% for a pay ratio of 250 times or greater than the median employee.
Local Ordinances—Though Overtly Political—Should Not Be Wholly Disregarded
Several commentators have recently dismissed the local pay ratio ordinances on the grounds that they are dependent upon the Dodd-Frank CEO pay ratio and that local measures like Portland’s would have to be re-drafted if the Dodd-Frank provision is repealed (as would be the case if the Choice 2.0 Act passes). However, the opposite could easily be true, namely that these local ordinances are part of a broader political development in which certain local politicians are eager to demonstrate jurisdictional advocacy and “resistance” to federal policy. Additionally, the proposals in Connecticut and Massachusetts are not based on the same methodology as the Dodd-Frank mandated pay ratio and would seem to be unaffected by a repeal of the law. Thus, we believe that if the Dodd-Frank mandated pay ratio is repealed, local legislation such as that in Portland could serve as an impetus for other states and cities to take matters into their own hands.
Other commentators have stated that such local legislation could make particular geographies less attractive to business. This raises an important point about the nature of state surtaxes and local ordinances that is sometimes mischaracterized by media coverage: the local ordinances appear to affect any public company either paying taxes on income earned in the given jurisdiction or paying local income tax under business license taxes. Therefore, state and local pay ratio ordinances could affect hundreds of public companies operating in certain locales where they recognize income, regardless of where the company is headquartered. This point is further magnified given the amount of economic and consumer activity represented by certain states where these measures are being considered, including California, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Illinois. If such measures pass, company costs—namely, local and state taxes and/or legal/regulatory compliance expenses—would increase while CEO pay levels would likely remain unaffected.
Adding Local Ordinance Considerations to Pay Ratio Strategy
While the future of the Dodd-Frank CEO pay ratio remains uncertain, it appears that the public dialogue over internal pay equity will continue or increase in the foreseeable future. As companies plan their strategies for calculating and communicating the Dodd-Frank CEO pay ratio in 2018 proxy statements, they should consider potential or existing local tax ordinances and the close scrutiny that these disclosures will garner as a factor in their planning. While pay ratio statistics might be useless other than as headline fodder, the reality is that they will be used for political gain and remain in the public discourse for now.