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Are Female Top Managers Really Paid Less?
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Are Female Top Managers Really Paid Less?

Philipp Geiler and Luc Renneboog
Journal of Corporate Finance, pp.345-369
01/12/2015

Abstract

Executive compensation Gender pay-gap Gender discrimination Pay-for-performance Glass ceiling Children-and-career
We study the gender pay gap for all top managers (CEO and executive directors) of listed UK companies and find mixed evidence: female CEOs do not face a pay gap, but the other female executive directors (e.g. CFO, COO, Deputy CEO) are discriminated against (while controlling for position, tenure, age, industry, time period, marital status, and parenthood). These female top managers earn about 23% less than their male counterparts, which amounts to £1.3 million over a five-year period (their average tenure as an executive at the board level). The gender pay gap is lower for managers in firms with female non-executive directors on the board. Also, female managers working in 'male' industries experience a smaller pay gap. When remuneration contracting occurs with the help of top remuneration, we note that the total remuneration offered to top managers is higher but the pay gap for executive directors still remains (but not for the CEO). The gender pay gap increases in case of marriage and parenthood.
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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.10 Economics
6.10.63 Corporate Governance
Web of Science research areas
Business, Finance
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