Executive Compensation

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Federal Regulation set limits on how much companies can get reimbursed for the salaries they compensate their management. Companies can pay more, but cannot charge the government for the amounts paid above the limit. For many years, the caps only applied to the top 5 executives, but the rule changed in December 2011, and now the cap applies to all employees, not just the top 5 executives.

Contents

Definitions

Compensation[1]

Senior Executive[2]

Fiscal year[3]

Contractor’s Headquarters

Benchmark Compensation Amount

Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR)

Limitation on allowability of compensation for certain contractor personnel[4]

  • (1) Senior executive compensation limit.

Applicability

(A) To all executive agencies, other than DoD, NASA and the Coast Guard, for contracts awarded before, on, or after December 31, 2011;

(B) To DoD, NASA, and the Coast Guard for contracts awarded before December 31, 2011;

    • (ii) Costs incurred after January 1, 1998. For costs incurred after January 1, 1998 for the compensation of a senior executive in excess of the benchmark compensation amount determined applicable for the contractor fiscal year by the Administrator, Office of Federal Procurement Policy (OFPP), under 41 U.S.C 1127 are unallowable (10 U.S.C. 2324(e)(1)(P) and 41 U.S.C 4304(a)(16)). This limitation is the sole statutory limitation on allowable senior executive compensation costs incurred after January 1, 1998, under new or previously existing contracts. This limitation applies whether or not the affected contracts were previously subject to a statutory limitation on such costs. (Note that pursuant to section 804 of Pub. L. 105-261, the definition of “senior executive” in (p)(3) has been changed for compensation costs incurred after January 1, 1999.)
  • (2) All employee compensation limit.
    • (i) Applicability. This paragraph (p)(2) applies to DOD, NASA, and the Coast Guard for contracts awarded on or after December 31, 2011;
    • (ii) Costs incurred after January 1, 2012. For costs incurred after January 1, 2012 for the compensation of any contractor employee in excess of the benchmark compensation amount, determined applicable for the contractor fiscal year by the Administrator, Office of Federal Procurement Policy (OFPP) under 41 U.S.C 1127 are unallowable (10 U.S.C. 2324(e)(1)(P)).

Salary Limits

The allowability of the compensation costs for the senior executives of Government contractors is capped by statute (10 U.S.C. 2324(e)(1)(P) and 41 U.S.C. 4304(a)(16) at a benchmark executive compensation amount. The benchmark amount does not limit the amount of compensation that an executive may otherwise receive. However, the compensation costs in excess of the benchmark amount are unallowable costs for Government contract purposes. Be aware, that the executive compensation limit does not automatically determine amounts below the limit are allowable. Other considerations that make an executives compensation allowable are reasonableness, allocability, and the compensation paid by other similar companies (the benchmark)[5].

The Administrator, Office of Federal Procurement Policy, (OFPP), determines the benchmark executive compensation amount as required by Section 39 of the OFPP Act, as amended (41 U.S.C. 1127). The benchmark amount applicable for a fiscal year is the median amount of the compensation provided for all senior executives of all benchmark corporations per commercially available surveys for the most recent year for which data is available at the time the OFPP Administrator determines the amount. The data used is the median (50th percentile) amount of compensation (total amount of wages, salary, bonuses and deferred compensation) accrued over a recent 12-month period for the top five highest paid employees in management positions at each home office and each segment of publicly traded U.S. companies with annual sales over $50 million. Once a benchmark compensation amount is established for a fiscal year, it is applicable for that fiscal year for a contractor and subsequent fiscal years, unless and until revised by OFPP[6].

The Executive Compensation Cap is implemented at FAR 31.205-6(p).

The limits have been increasing, and are based on formula established in 1997. Previous limits are:

Year Compensation Limit Comment
1998 $340,650
2004 $432,851
2005 $473,318
2006 $546,689
2007 $597,912
2008 $612,196
2009 $684,181
2010 $693,951
2011 $763,029
2012 $952,308
2014 $487,000 The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 (“BBA”) repeals the compensation cap formula used by OFPP and sets a new initial allowable cost cap on contracts and subcontracts awarded on or after 180 days after enactment (June 24, 2014). This cap will be adjusted annually based on the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Employment Cost Index.
E E E

Compensation Still Needs to Meet Reasonableness Test

Executive compensation subject to the specific FAR and DFARS limitations is also subject to the reasonableness provisions of the FAR. Compensation that does not exceed the specific limitations may still be unreasonable when compared to other positions with comparable rank, function, and responsibility in other firms of similar size. The smaller the firm, the more likely this will be the case. Therefore, auditors should consider tests of reasonableness even when executive compensation is below the ceiling[7].

2014 Changes and Updates

The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 (BBA) repeals the compensation cap formula used by OFPP and sets a new initial allowable cost cap of $487,000 for costs claimed on contracts and subcontracts awarded on or after enactment (June 24, 2014). This cap will be adjusted annually based on the Bureau of Labor Statistics Employment Cost Index.

Beginning on and after June 24, 2014, contracts need to limit the amounts bid on or claimed on contracts to $487,000.

Resources and Links

Th Office of Management and Budget website is a very useful website. We capture much of that information here. http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/procurement_index_exec_comp/

Federal Acquisition Regulation; https://www.acquisition.gov/far/

References and Notes

  1. As used in FAR 31.205-6(p)
  2. As used in FAR 31.205-6(p)
  3. As used in FAR 31.205-6(p)
  4. FAR 31.205-6(p)
  5. OMB website, March 21, 2014
  6. OMB webiste, March 21, 2014
  7. Contract Audit Manual (CAM) Section 6-414.8 Compensation Ceilings - General Audit Considerations (d). October 9, 2014