Shareholder
group critical as Roche and Novartis chiefs top Swiss pay table
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[October 08, 2014]
ZURICH (Reuters) - The bosses of
drugmakers Roche and Novartis both earned more than 13 million
Swiss francs ($13.6 million) last year, according to a study published
on Wednesday, 18 months after the Swiss voted for some of the world's
strictest controls on executive pay.
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The pay packets of Roche CEO Severin Schwan and Novartis
counterpart Joe Jimenez topped the list of Switzerland's best-paid
managers and prompted criticism from shareholder group Ethos, which
conducted the study.
"Double-digit sums are difficult to accept in Switzerland," Ethos
director Dominique Biedermann told reporters. "When Mr Schwan and Mr
Jimenez earn 13 million in a good year, but not a record year, what
will they earn in a record year?"
Last year Swiss voters backed proposals to give shareholders the
power to veto executive pay proposals as well as banning big rewards
for new and departing managers. Companies have until the end of 2015
to implement the measures.
Ethos said the initiative appeared to have slowed the growth in
executive pay, with overall compensation staying broadly stable
despite a sharp rise in company share prices and profit.
Roche's Schwan earned 13.4 million francs, a drop of 13 percent from
the previous year, while Jimenez's Novartis remuneration was stable
at 13.2 million francs.
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Executive pay at Switzerland's 100 biggest companies rose 2 percent
last year, driven by an 8 percent rise in salaries in the financial
services sector. Pay in other industries slipped by 1 percent.
Average CEO pay in Switzerland rose 4 percent to 3.4 million francs,
while that of a non-executive chairman fell 7 percent to 1.2 million
francs.
(Reporting by Caroline Copley; Editing by David Goodman)
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