Does executive pay reward firms for looking green without cutting emissions?
Faizul Haque and Collins G. Ntim examine how compensation, ESG-linked pay policies, carbon performance and valuations interact in « Executive Compensation, Sustainable Compensation Policy, Carbon Performance and Market Value ».
They rely on fixed-effects and GMM models on 4,379 firm-year observations from 13 European countries between 2002 and 2016. Their main takeaways include:
This article show the market rewards symbolic carbon efforts more than substantive emission reductions, a result consistent across specifications.
It suggests that financial professionals should analyse whether compensation schemes promote substantive science-based emissions reductions rather than symbolic disclosure-driven climate strategies.
Issuers can redesign incentive structures to make sure they shift the focus from climate communication to climate outcomes by embedding more explicit and measurable GHG reduction targets into executive compensation.
The study s restricted to listed firms in industrialised European countries, limiting generalisability to markets with different regulatory, cultural, or governance environments.
Process-oriented and actual carbon performance are analysed separately, without testing how disclosure-driven practices translate into real emission outcomes.