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The ethics of Australian executive remuneration packages

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Abstract

This article raises the issue of growing inequalities in remuneration in Australia at a time of severe economic recession. The salary packages of the CEOs and senior managers of large Australian companies have been increased substantially in recent years often in spite of poor performance of the companies. At the same time real wages have either stagnated or, according to some researchers, have fallen in the same period. In addition unemployment has risen to unprecedented high levels (above 11%).

The ethics of such growing differentials are rarely addressed in the literature on compensation. It is mooted that the lack of ethical scrutiny affects staff morale and performance by non-managerial employees adversely. It tends to make a mockery of the philosophy of performance-based pay and the concept of appointment and promotion on the basis of merit. Without suggesting a widespread breakdown in norms and standards in Australia this article does question the quality of Australian management and raises the issue of appropriate corrections. Studies about the need for a new direction in management education and into the role of the Boards of Directors, their competence and functions have been conducted and others are in train. These suggest a preference for piecemeal reforms while, perhaps, more drastic measures are required.

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Dr. Klaas Woldring is a Senior Lecturer in Management at the Southern Cross University, Lismore, Australia. He taught at the University of Zambia in the early 1980s and edited a bookZambia's Development Predicament (1984). Since returning to Australia he has concentrated his research on Australia's management problems, management education, HRM and business ethics. At present he is editing two Readers, one on business ethics and another on managerial integrity and competence.

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Woldring, K. The ethics of Australian executive remuneration packages. J Bus Ethics 14, 937–947 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00882071

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