Is linking executive pay to ESG targets just greenwashing?
Matthias Efing, Stefanie Ehmann, Patrick Kampkötter, and Raphael Moritz investigate whether tying top managers’ pay to ESG goals amounts to more than symbolic compliance in their article « All Hat and No Cattle? ESG Incentives in Executive Compensation ».
They use detailed panel data on European executives from 2013 to 2020 to analyze how sustainability targets are integrated into bonus and equity incentive plans.
They show:
This paper claims a company boasting sustainability-linked pay isn’t necessarily driving change: simply adding ESG objectives to bonus plans without real teeth can be viewed as PR moves and backfire.
The low clarity on target weights and performance thresholds prevent stakeholders from distinguishing genuine sustainability incentives from token gestures.
As a limitation, simply counting the number of ESG metrics may overstate their importance. Firms might split one ESG theme into multiple sub-metrics to make the pay plan appear more sustainability-oriented.
Detailed information on long-term incentive plans was limited, as many firms did not disclose exact targets or weights for multi-year plans, which led the analysis to emphasise short-term annual bonus structures.