At the beginning of the year, it looked as if minimum wage
legislation would also be a vehicle for the first executive pay action
of the
new Congress.
Several weeks later, however, provisions in the Senate
version of
the wage measure that would limit deferred compensation and extend a
portion of the tax code covering a company’s five highest-paid
employees have
run into stiff headwinds from the business community and
the
House.
The Senate has approved as part of its wage bill a measure
that
would limit the amount of compensation that could be deferred tax free each
year to $1 million or the five-year average of an individual’s salary
before the
deferral, which ever is less.
The provision, meant to target executives, would generate tax
revenue to help pay for $8.3 billion in tax cuts designed to help
alleviate the
impact of the wage increase—from $5.15 to $7.25 over two
years—on small
businesses.
The House passed a companion bill to its minimum wage
legislation
that contains $1.3 billion in tax cuts but none of the Senate’s
compensation provisions.
It’s not clear when the House and Senate will resolve their
differences. In addition, the House has attached its wage and related tax bills
to an Iraq emergency funding
bill.
As a preview of potentially contentious negotiations,
the House
Ways & Means Committee held a mid-March hearing to give business
representatives a chance to air their grievances about the Senate
bill.
They warned that the deferred compensation proposal would
undermine
retention and retirement programs for workers far below the corporate
suite.
Greg Heaslip, vice president of benefits at PepsiCo, said the
company allows employees to defer base salary and bonuses as a way
to
encourage retirement savings.
He’s worried that under the Senate plan, strong investment
returns
and other accruals would wind up subjecting employees to tax penalties
on money they haven’t yet received—a situation that would undermine
pensions.
“In today’s environment, traditional defined-benefit plans
already
face many challenges,” he said in prepared testimony. “Disenfranchising
middle and senior managers from these plans would add another huge
challenge to
the continuation of these plans.”
Another witness argued that deferring an executive’s
compensation
increases his or her incentive to help a corporation thrive into
the
future.
“That’s a pretty good way of aligning [a CEO’s] interests
with that
of a company,” says Kenneth Petrini, vice president, taxes for Air
Products and Chemicals Inc., who testified on behalf of the National
Association
of Manufacturers.
There may be room for House-Senate compromise on deferred
compensation and highest-paid employees, according to an aide to Sen.
Charles
Grassley, R-Iowa and the ranking member of the Senate Finance
Committee.
Grassley and Sen. Max Baucus, D-Montana and committee
chairman, authored the
Senate tax package.
“He’s willing to modify them in conference if it’s clear …
that the
provisions will unfairly target middle-income workers who are simply
saving for retirement rather than the corporate top executives who
receive
enormous compensation packages regardless of their performance,
and at
shareholders’ expense,” says Jill Gerber, a Grassley
spokeswoman.
—Mark Schoeff Jr.