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Executive pay so far rarely on the chopping block even as Hong Kong reels from coronavirus

  • Just 15 per cent of Hong Kong companies reported cuts in base salaries of executives
  • Most saw pay reduced by between 20 per cent to 30 per cent

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The coronavirus has hit Hong Kong’s economy hard. It was already hammered by the trade war and months of social unrest. Photo: Nora Tam

A survey of 140 companies in Hong Kong found that just 15 per cent had cut base salaries for executives, and 11 per cent had put in place unpaid leave to cut employment costs, according to Comptify Analytics, which compiled the data for a report in April.

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The report, Executive Pay and Cost Containment Measures for Covid-19 in Hong Kong, was released on April 23. The authors said that of the Hong Kong-based executives taking a pay cut, 70 per cent were getting a cut of between 20 per cent to 30 per cent.

Of the companies imposing unpaid leave, 78 per cent said the amount of unpaid leave was 15 per cent of working time.

The industries hardest hit were in logistics and supply chains, where 83 per cent of companies said they had used pay cuts, enforced leave or a combination of measures to contain costs. Companies in lifestyle retail and luxury goods saw 54 per cent similarly affected. The companies most likely not to be resorting to such measures were financial services and insurance, with just 8 per cent of companies reporting doing so.

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The Hong Kong government’s Employment Subside Scheme appeared to have impact on companies that were planning on cost cutting measures, with 47 per cent of respondents saying they would “scale down” cost cuts, once the subsidies were in place.

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