The Advisors' Blog

This blog features wisdom from respected compensation consultants and lawyers

June 22, 2012

UK One Step Closer to Binding Say-on-Pay: On to Parliament

Broc Romanek, CompensationStandards.com

Two days ago, the UK took another step closer to mandating binding say-on-pay when Business Secretary Vince Cable presented a bill to Parliament mandating binding say-on-pay for consideration. Here is a page with information on the “Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill.”

As I understand it, it looks very likely that the bill will pass and perhaps be law by October of 2013. There would actually be three types of say-on-pay votes:

– Review of past compensation – non-binding and annual
– Prospective review on compensation policy – binding and would happen every three years so long as the company’s pay policy hadn’t changed; if it had changed, would happen annually
– Share plans – binding

The biggest debate is over the annual advisory vote – which is backward looking – and supermajority vote thresholds. This Manifest blog captures some of the debate. I’ll be blogging more on this as I figure it out.

What will happen now is that amendments to the Enterprise Bill are introduced in the House of Commons for debate. It then goes to committee and then to the upper chamber, the House of Lords, which then has their debate and committee and then if all is well, it is passed into law (unlike Congress, no riders or changes can be snuck in – only the bill that has been debated can pass). The Financial Reporting Council – which is a separate body and which looks after the UK Governance Code – will then do its own consultation regarding amendments to the UK Governance Code to ensure that the Law, as it applies to UK incorporated companies, will apply to listed companies. Thanks to Sarah Wilson of Manifest for helping to explain the UK process!