Executive salaries are a hot topic these days, mostly due to the huge bonuses paid out to executives in the financial industry, at companies that needed government aid during the global financial crisis. And the French have always been exceptionally sensitive about this topic, as a country with strong unions and an a socialist government.
So when the Renault board voted to almost triple the 2014 salary of its CEO and Chairman Carlos Ghosn to € 7,2 million in cash and share options (up from € 2,67 million in 2013), it shouldn’t come as a surprise that 5 of the 19 board members voted against the proposal, including those of the French state, which still controls a 15% share in Renault. What these board members must have failed to realize, is that Renault’s net income has also tripled, to € 1,89 billion thanks to sales successes of the Renault and Dacia brands in Europe and continued benefits from the alliance with Nissan.
Ghosn has been in charge of Renault for 10 years and helped to make the alliance with Nissan perhaps the most successful in the automotive world ever, he’s led Nissan for 15 years, and he’s known for setting audacious goals and then achieving them.
Renault met 90% of its financial targets last year, even despite increased difficulties in some of its most important markets outside Europe, including Argentina, Brazil and Russia, and being fashionably late to the party in China, which booming growth rate is already cooling.
On top of his salary from Renault, Ghosn also receives a similar payday from Nissan, which came in at almost Y 1 billion (€ 7,6 million) in 2013. This would bring him on par with the salary for Daimler CEO Dieter Zetsche, who earned €14,4 million in 2014.