Module HMB-3527:
Executive Compensation
Executive Compensation 2024-25
HMB-3527
2024-25
Bangor Business School
Module - Semester 2
10 credits
Module Organiser:
Debbie Gilliland
Overview
Executive Compensation will provide a reader on the many exciting but often unexplained features of how firms remunerate their executive officers. Drawing on economic theory the module will examine how executive compensation contracts provide incentives for executives to behave in specific ways, what the benefits are of a heterogeneous board of directors, what effects might one expect from gender differences, how firms can set their compensation policy to enhance effort, and the increasing importance of culture in affecting executive behaviour and firm performance. The module will help to develop understanding by considering whether theoretical predictions are supported by empirical evidence.
Assessment Strategy
-threshold -D- to D+Demonstration of the required knowledge and techniques but with significant mistakes and little development of the subject beyond lecture material.
-good -B- to B+Clear understanding of the subject, together with evidence of investigation and understanding of the research literature, but with some theoretical or practical minor errors.
-excellent -A- to A+Excellent grasp of the concepts and techniques together with significant evidence of engagement and understanding of the research papers in this area.
-another level-C- to C+Demonstration of the required knowledge and techniques but with mistakes and little development of the subject beyond lecture material.
Learning Outcomes
- Appreciate how board diversity and director heterogeneity can affect firm performance outcomes.
- Critically evaluate whether executive compensation arrangements had failed and were a causal factor in the global banking crisis of 2008-09.
- Demonstrate comprehension of the theories that explain the growth in executive pay and why firms willingly reward their CEOs with what many commentators suggest is excessively large compensation packages.
- Exhibit a critical awareness of how the incentive structures that are implicit in executive compensation contracts affects the behaviour of executive officers, which, in turn, affects firm performance outcomes; and to consider whether firms can use compensation policy to deliver performance gains.
- Review regulatory actions and proposals to reform compensation arrangements including the emerging importance of corporate culture within firms.
Assessment method
Coursework
Assessment type
Summative
Description
Coursework
Weighting
25%
Assessment method
Exam (Centrally Scheduled)
Assessment type
Summative
Description
Exam S2
Weighting
75%