The determinants of CEO compensation in non-profit organizations: the case of UK charities

UK charities constitute an important part of the UK economy and have a positive effect on supporting vulnerable groups. This paper examines the determinants of CEO compensation in the UK non-profit organizations, focuses on the factors that affect CEO compensation on the board, organization, and CEO...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chen, Yuwei
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2020
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/62033/
_version_ 1848799927828742144
author Chen, Yuwei
author_facet Chen, Yuwei
author_sort Chen, Yuwei
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description UK charities constitute an important part of the UK economy and have a positive effect on supporting vulnerable groups. This paper examines the determinants of CEO compensation in the UK non-profit organizations, focuses on the factors that affect CEO compensation on the board, organization, and CEO individual level. Specifically, it is supported by several theoretical perspectives including agency theory, stewardship theory, stakeholder theory, and resources dependency theory. In this context, the sample includes the 160 largest charities in the UK and the data is manually collected from the Charity Commission and the annual reports. To investigate the relationship between CEO compensation and different variables, fixed effect regression is adopted. The result indicates that CEO characteristics affect the CEO compensation most, CEOs with more experience and higher qualifications are considered to be paid more. Besides, the gender pay gap exists in NPOs, the number of male CEOs account for a large proportion, and their compensation is relatively higher than female CEOs. On the board level, the establishment of remuneration or nomination committee is negatively associated with CEO compensation, other board characteristics are regarded insignificant suggest that CEOs in NPOs are altruistic and driven by intrinsic motivation, meanwhile, the traditional agency theory is not proper to adopt in NPOs. Lastly, this paper provides implications for academia and the development of the non-profit sector, hoping to contribute to the regulation, governance practice of the CEO compensation in the non-profit sector.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:43:27Z
format Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-62033
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:43:27Z
publishDate 2020
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-620332022-12-21T14:28:27Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/62033/ The determinants of CEO compensation in non-profit organizations: the case of UK charities Chen, Yuwei UK charities constitute an important part of the UK economy and have a positive effect on supporting vulnerable groups. This paper examines the determinants of CEO compensation in the UK non-profit organizations, focuses on the factors that affect CEO compensation on the board, organization, and CEO individual level. Specifically, it is supported by several theoretical perspectives including agency theory, stewardship theory, stakeholder theory, and resources dependency theory. In this context, the sample includes the 160 largest charities in the UK and the data is manually collected from the Charity Commission and the annual reports. To investigate the relationship between CEO compensation and different variables, fixed effect regression is adopted. The result indicates that CEO characteristics affect the CEO compensation most, CEOs with more experience and higher qualifications are considered to be paid more. Besides, the gender pay gap exists in NPOs, the number of male CEOs account for a large proportion, and their compensation is relatively higher than female CEOs. On the board level, the establishment of remuneration or nomination committee is negatively associated with CEO compensation, other board characteristics are regarded insignificant suggest that CEOs in NPOs are altruistic and driven by intrinsic motivation, meanwhile, the traditional agency theory is not proper to adopt in NPOs. Lastly, this paper provides implications for academia and the development of the non-profit sector, hoping to contribute to the regulation, governance practice of the CEO compensation in the non-profit sector. 2020-12-01 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/62033/1/20151159%20BUSI4153%20The%20determinants%20of%20CEO%20compensation%20in%20non-profit%20organizations-%20the%20case%20of%20UK%20charities.pdf Chen, Yuwei (2020) The determinants of CEO compensation in non-profit organizations: the case of UK charities. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)]
spellingShingle Chen, Yuwei
The determinants of CEO compensation in non-profit organizations: the case of UK charities
title The determinants of CEO compensation in non-profit organizations: the case of UK charities
title_full The determinants of CEO compensation in non-profit organizations: the case of UK charities
title_fullStr The determinants of CEO compensation in non-profit organizations: the case of UK charities
title_full_unstemmed The determinants of CEO compensation in non-profit organizations: the case of UK charities
title_short The determinants of CEO compensation in non-profit organizations: the case of UK charities
title_sort determinants of ceo compensation in non-profit organizations: the case of uk charities
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/62033/