Do More With Reuters
Partner Services

Salman Khursheed warns firms on "vulgar" top pay

Mon Oct 5, 2009 12:32pm IST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - The corporate affairs minister has warned firms against paying huge salaries to top company brass and said the government would keep a watch on executive compensation.

India's left-of-centre Congress-led government is on an austerity drive to shore up public finances as the country's population reels under economic slowdown and the worst drought in decades.

Ministers and some lawmakers have taken salary cuts in solidarity, a sign of political pressure the Congress party faces before three state elections in October. Those polls will be the first test of the government's popularity since its May general election win.

"I think when we are working on this (austerity), we can hardly say that we (will) shut our eyes on what salary the CEOs are going to take," news agency Press Trust of India quoted Salman Khursheed as saying.

"I don't think anyone in India today, in politics or outside politics ... has reached the level of liberalism where vulgarity is also a fundamental right."

Excessive compensation has sparked outrage across the developed world after years of multi-million dollar bonuses paid out to executives, even at money-losing firms.

Politicians and policy makers have advocated curbs on these salaries, a theme echoed at the Group of 20 meeting in September.

In 2007, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told a business lobby to avoid "excessive remuneration" and to "discourage conspicuous consumption," warning widening inequalities could lead to social unrest.

The Mail Today newspaper quoted Sajjan Jindal, managing director of JSW Steel as saying Indian firms had already reduced pay at senior levels and "vulgar salaries" did not exist.

(Reporting by C.J. Kuncheria; Editing by Alistair Scrutton and Jerry Norton)

India Investment Summit 2009
India Investment Summit 2009

Top executives and bankers discuss their own plans and the broader opportunities and challenges for India during the Reuters India Investment Summit in Mumbai and Bangalore.  Full Coverage | Blog 

Hugh Hefner
PLAYBOY SALE
An icon bows to changing times

With his Playboy Enterprises in talks to be sold for about $300 million, the 83 year-old Hugh Hefner will be giving up control over the iconic adult entertainment empire he founded that was instrumental in shaping society's opinions on nudity, sex and free speech.  Full Article 

Photo
A man walks past a bronze statue of a bull outside the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) building in Mumbai in this March 25, 2008 file photo. REUTERS/Punit Paranjpe/Files
Bubble trouble?

With India's benchmark stock index, the BSE Sensex, at around 17,000 points, are the Indian equity markets looking at a possible bubble?  Commentary 

Market Update

  • IndiaIndia
  • USUS
  • UKUK
  • Asia
  • Most Actives

SPECIAL REPORT

Himangshu Watts
India's food dilemma

Indian farms are failing to attract capital or talent, either from rich landlords or the students who graduate from agricultural universities.  Full Article | Related Story 

showcase

U.S. Recession
U.S. Recession

A trip through the epicenters of the American recession.  Full Coverage 

 
Central Banks Cautious
Central Banks Cautious

Reuters tracks the policies of the world's top central banks as the debate over global economic recovery rages on.   Full Coverage 

 
T P Raman
Column - RBI leads the world

Reserve Bank of India's approach ring-fenced the banking system.   Full Article 

 
Funding Blues
Funding Blues

A popular tactic used by Indian brokerages to raise money for rich clients is likely to be banned.  Full Article 

 
Not Enough Jobs
Not Enough Jobs

Venture capital creates jobs, but not enough.  Full Article 

 
Column - A Sweet Dream
Column - A Sweet Dream

There are good reasons for Ferrero to consider a combination with Cadbury.  Full Article