Deferred Bonuses May Not Reduce Risk-Taking

Deferring bonuses for top executives at financial institutions may not result in the desired risk-taking as the recipients of the compensation view the payments as having less value, according to research from PricewaterhouseCoopers and the London School of Economics, reports Financial Times.

Deferring bonuses for top executives at financial institutions may not result in the desired risk-taking as the recipients of the compensation view the payments as having less value, according to research from PricewaterhouseCoopers and the London School of Economics. “The extent to which executives devalue deferred pay calls into question the effectiveness of bonus deferral,” according to Tom Gosling, a PwC remuneration partner.

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