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Murthy Questions Pay Hike To Infosys’ Chief Operating Officer

NR Narayana Murthy says 60-70 percent increase in compensation is not proper.

N.R. Narayana Murthy, co-founder and chairman of Infosys Ltd. (Photographer: Jerome Favre/Bloomberg)
N.R. Narayana Murthy, co-founder and chairman of Infosys Ltd. (Photographer: Jerome Favre/Bloomberg)

Two months after questioning governance standards at Infosys Ltd., co-founder NR Narayana Murthy has again criticised the company’s board, this time over a pay hike to Chief Operating Officer Pravin Rao.

“Giving nearly 60 percent to 70 percent increase in compensation for a top-level person (even including performance-based variable pay) when the compensation for most of the employees in the company was increased by just 6 percent to 8 percent is, in my opinion, not proper,” Murthy said in an email reviewed by BloombergQuint.

India’s second largest software services company had said in October that it would raise Rao’s salary to include a fixed compensation of Rs 4.62 crore and a variable compensation of Rs 3.88 crore per annum. He will also be getting stock compensation worth Rs 4 crore based on his performance in the financial year 2015-16. Besides, he is entitled to other perquisites and allowances. The resolution was put to vote between February 23 and March 31.

Only 24 percent of the promoters voted in favour of the resolution while the rest abstained, according to the stock exchange filings. Of the 11,191 shareholders who voted, 67 percent voted in favour while the rest rejected it.

No previous resolution in the history of the company has received such a low approval.
NR Narayana Murthy, Co-Founder, Infosys

Such a decision will likely erode the trust and faith of the employees in the management and the board, Murthy said in the email.

Co-founders, including Murthy, had questioned executive compensation and corporate governance at the company in February. Among other things, the differences with the company’s board had cropped up over increased compensation to Chief Executive Officer Vishal Sikka and a severance pay to former Chief Financial Officer Rajiv Bansal.

Murthy again highlighted the governance issues at the company in his latest email. “With what conscience can a decent person like Pravin tell his juniors that they should work hard and make sacrifice to reduce cost and protect margin? I have got so many mails from these people asking whether this resolution is fair,” he said in the mail.

Given the current poor governance standards at Infosys, let us also remember that these targets for variable pay may not be adhered to if the board wants to favour a top management person.
NR Narayana Murthy, Co-Founder, Infosys

Every senior management person has to show restraint in his or her compensation and perquisites and should fight to maintain a reasonable ratio between the lowest salary and the highest salary in a corporation, he said.

“This is necessary if we have to make compassionate capitalism acceptable to a majority of Indians who are poor. Without compassionate capitalism, this country cannot create jobs and solve the problem of poverty. Experts tell me that capitalism may come to an end in the not-so-distant future if the current corporate leaders do not heed this advice in India.”