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The Drucker Difference September 12, 2008, 2:26PM EST

Put a Cap on CEO Pay

(page 2 of 2)

asp?personId=200004&symbol=COST'>Jim Sinegal made $3.2 million, including a $350,000 salary, an $80,000 bonus, and stock grants and options valued at $2.6 million. While hardly chump change, that was far less than what his peers raked in—and far less than what Costco's compensation committee wanted to give him. But the panel said in a regulatory filing that it was willing to respect his "wishes to receive modest compensation, in part because it believes that higher amounts would not change Mr. Sinegal's motivation and performance."

Setting pay for top executives can be tricky, even for those whose instinct is to nip their remuneration. In the mid-1980s, after consulting with Drucker, furniture maker Herman Miller (MLHR) agreed that its CEO's pay would be restricted to 20 times the average of all its employees. "The subtle part of this limit was the message to the CEO: If you want to get more pay, you need to do it by raising the average pay" of everyone at the company, the man who used to hold the post, Dick Ruch, recalled in his book Leaders & Followers.

But in 1997, Herman Miller ditched Drucker's model. "From a competitive standpoint," Ruch said, "we needed to eliminate the cap to attract and retain the right people."

Drucker himself conceded that compensation formulas are inherently difficult to develop. "I would be the last person to claim that a 'fair,' let alone a 'scientific,' system can be devised," he wrote. Yet at the same time, he never gave up on the 20-to-1 rule for CEOs, touting it as the right thing for the good of the organization, as well as for the general health of society.

Allowing an enormous disparity in income to exist "corrodes," Drucker warned. "It destroys mutual trust between groups that have to live together and work together."

And, on occasion, bail each other out.

Join a debate about golden parachutes for CEOs.

Rick Wartzman is the director of the Drucker Institute at Claremont Graduate University and an Irvine senior fellow at the New America Foundation.

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