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Singapore’s family-run firms lack pay transparency, study shows

Ishika Mookerjee / Bloomberg
Ishika Mookerjee / Bloomberg • 2 min read
Singapore’s family-run firms lack pay transparency, study shows
Singapore has in recent years tightened rules including limiting the tenure of directors and improved executive pay disclosure.
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(March 23): Singapore-listed companies are replete with executive directors that are either substantial shareholders or related to them, and firms aren’t disclosing enough about how pay is decided.

About three in four executive directors are substantial shareholders or are family members, according to a study released on Monday by the National University of Singapore (NUS) Business School’s Centre for Investor Protection. These directors tend to be better compensated, raising the question of potentially excessive remuneration for these companies, the authors led by Mak Yuen Teen said.

While there is greater disclosure executive compensation in Singapore, most firms still failed to shared specific performance measures that determined annual bonuses, according to the report Paying for Value or Just Paying More? which reviewed 469 firms which have a primary listing in Singapore.

“There remains a lack of transparency on remuneration paid to key management personnel and employees who are related to substantial shareholders, directors and CEOs,” Mak said.

Non-independent directors typically increase the risk of executive pay inflation due to greater control over remuneration committees or appointment of independent directors. Singapore has in recent years tightened rules including limiting the tenure of directors and improved executive pay disclosure as the city state seeks to boost corporate accountability and improve shareholder returns.

The NUS report called for amendments to Singapore’s listing rules to only allow non-executive directors to be part of remuneration committees. It also asked for Singapore’s corporate governance code to boost requirements for transparency around pay disclosures, remuneration determination policies for directors, and make it clear how they are linked to performance.

See also: MAS issues prohibition orders on former Citi and Julius Baer RMs convicted for roles in $3 bil money-laundering case

The average total remuneration of executive chairpersons in Singapore was $1.18 million a year while chief executive officers were paid $1.24 million, according to the study, citing annual reports published between March 2025 and February.

Uploaded by Tham Yek Lee

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