The limitation of executive compensation has been a matter of public and policy debate for at least 20 years. We examine a regulatory action in Austria in 2014 where the tax deductibility of the total value of executive compensation is unavoidably limited. We find no average effects on the growth or composition of executives’ pay. However, the deductibility limit affects the managers of firms with low bargaining power and of firms with strong corporate governance, indicating that they are affected by the deductibility limit. Additionally, the contract durations for executives decrease after renegotiation. We further find that affected firms experience cuts in investment and research and development, suggesting that shareholders bear part of the economic burden. Our results indicate that the effectiveness of other reforms, such as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, in restricting executive pay is rather limited.
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Research Article|
July 07 2022
Do Corporate Taxes Affect Executive Compensation?
Martin Jacob
;
Martin Jacob
AUSTRIA
WHU - Otto Beisheim School of Management
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Mariana A Sailer
Mariana A Sailer
Vienna University of Economics and Business
Finance, Accounting & Statistics
Welthandelsplatz 1
Gebäude D3, 3. OG
AUSTRIA
Vienna
Vienna
1020
+43680116560
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Received:
November 06 2021
Revision Received:
November 06 2021
Revision Received:
March 09 2022
Revision Received:
June 01 2022
Accepted:
June 30 2022
Online Issn: 1558-7967
Print Issn: 0001-4826
2022
The Accounting Review (2022)
Citation
Tobias Bornemann, Martin Jacob, Mariana A Sailer; Do Corporate Taxes Affect Executive Compensation?. The Accounting Review 2022; https://doi.org/10.2308/TAR-2019-0567
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