scorecardIndian IT CEOs are nowhere near their US counterparts when it comes to safety net
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Indian IT CEOs are nowhere near their US counterparts when it comes to safety net

Indian IT CEOs are nowhere near their US counterparts when it comes to safety net
Stock Market2 min read
CEOs of India’s IT industry are considered among the best paid and their severance package have also started looking better but when compared to their US counterparts, Indians may be lagging behind.

Francisco D'Souza of Cognizant is entitled to $24 million (Rs 154 crore) if his employment is terminated without cause, according to filings with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Likewise, Infosys’ Vishal Sikka is entitled to severance pay that could go up to about $10 million.

NR Narayana Murthy, Nandan Nilekani, S Gopalakrishnan and SD Shibulal were uniformly entitled to just three months of severance pay if their employment was terminated without cause.

Economic Times reported Sikka, in comparison, is entitled to 18 months of base pay that will be paid out over a period of 18 months, along with 18 times the liquidated payout in equal installments over a period of 18 months.

Sikka currently earns about $900,000 in annual base pay and another $4.18 million in annual variable pay, and also is entitled to about $2 million of stock options.

In an email, a TCS spokeswoman told the financial daily,“Despite burgeoning pay packages and severance clauses, some feel that CEOs in India do not have the kind of safety net that heads of US-based companies typically enjoy.”

The former CEO of one of India's top software companies told ET that while the rules make it easier to hold the chief executive accountable for a company's performance, the company is not similarly accountable to protect the interests of its CEO. "In Indian companies, CEO contracts can often be relatively vague and they haven't changed at all over the last decade. While Indian companies have done great work on beefing up governance over the past 10 years, there is still a big gap in terms of protecting the rights of the CEO," this person told the financial daily on the condition of anonymity.

However, the severance packages of CEOs of US were different.

Jack Welch made $417 million when he left General Electric, and Meg Whitman pocketed $120 million from eBay. Golden parachutes of US-based CEOs typically include cash severance, accelerated vesting on stock awards and interest on deferred compensation.

ET stated that in India, since a number of companies typically appoint internal candidates as CEOs, their contracts are more often than not an extension of their existing employee contracts, which typically don't include the large severance packages enjoyed by their US counterparts.

In 2011, Wipro's Azim Premji decided to ditch the joint CEO-model and appointed TK Kurien as the company's new CEO. Wipro's joint CEOs Suresh Vaswani and Girish Paranjpe were given severance packages of about $1.55 million -- much lower than what US-based CEOs typically enjoy.

The contrast is stark even within IT companies -- between CEOs based in India and those based overseas.

N Chandrasekaran of TCS and TK Kurien of Wipro have severance packages that are a fraction of the size of those handed to US-based D'Souza and Sikka. Former HCL Technologies CEO Vineet Nayar, however, told ET that in India contracts are trust-based and boards reward CEOs liberally. "Boards go out of the way to take care of successful CEOs by keeping them engaged and compensating them well," he said.

(Image: Indiatimes)

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