Much of university executives’ annual pay should be held aside for up to a decade while the long-term impact of their handiwork becomes apparent, an Australian Senate committee has?heard.
Economist Sean Leaver said 40 per cent of vice-chancellors’ total remuneration, and 20 per cent of the earnings of other university executives, should be withheld in a “deferred compensation” fund.
Those affected would be able to collect half of their deferred pay after five years and the rest in another five years, under Leaver’s recommendation to the Education and Employment Committee.
“Clawback provisions” would allow universities to reclaim payments to executives subsequently found to have misbehaved or caused financial harm.
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The approach would help resolve a “mismatch” between university executives’ “current observed performance” and the future effects of “unobserved risky behaviour or malpractice”.
Leaver, a former banker, said the approach had been applied in finance in the wake of “numerous high-profile cases” where the “full consequence” of employees’ performance had taken years to emerge.
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“By deferring some of a bank employee’s compensation to a future date, an employee is motivated to ensure actions are aligned with the bank’s long-term viability and performance,” he explained in a submission to the committee’s university governance inquiry.
He said the idea had been enshrined in the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (Apra) , which requires the governing bodies of financial institutions to maintain pay arrangements that promote “effective” risks management, “sustainable performance and “long-term soundness”.
Apra-regulated entities are expected to defer 60 per cent of their chief executives’ “variable” remuneration, such as bonuses and incentive payments. For other senior managers or any “highly-paid material risk-taker”, 40 per cent of variable remuneration must be deferred.
Leaver, a former staffer and doctoral candidate at RMIT University, has published numerous articles, book chapters, submissions and conference papers focusing on the behavioural economics of education.
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He warned against Australia’s 2014 proposal to deregulate university fees, arguing that market-based assumptions – for example, that high prices drove customers elsewhere – were inadequate in explaining the complexities of educational choice, particularly when tuition fees were covered by income-contingent loans.
He also that if fee deregulation were to proceed, private fund managers – rather than the government – should assume the risk of non-repayment, as a way of pressuring universities not to set unrealistic fees.
Executive pay is a prominent topic in the 181 published submissions to the Senate committee inquiry. Mark Humphery-Jenner, associate professor of finance at UNSW Sydney, argued that university executives should be offered incentive payments tied to their institutions’ financial viability.
But Humphery-Jenner cautioned against pay caps or government intervention, insisting that Australian university leaders were “underpaid” compared with their counterparts in the private sector and overseas. He said that at least 240 US university presidents earned more than the typical Australian vice-chancellor’s package of about A$1 million (?480,000), and scores of company chief executives received more than A$5 million.
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“If we reduce vice-chancellor pay, then those vice-chancellors can [move] to higher paid alternative jobs,” his submission says. “No legislative change to executive pay is...warranted.”
Peter Tregear, an adjunct professor at the University of Adelaide, scoffed at suggestions that universities needed to pay executives enough to attract the best in a global market. He observed that the vice-chancellors of the nation’s six top-ranked institutions were all Australian-born.
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