Chapter 4
Employee share schemes in Australia and overseas
Employee share schemes in Australia
4.1
In Australia, employee share schemes have operated since the 1950s and
under legislation since 1974.[1]
A number of submitters noted that employee ownership is 'still at an early
developmental stage' in Australia, in comparison to the United States, United
Kingdom, France and Japan where they are a 'significant workplace phenomenon'.[2]
According to Dr Klaas Woldring, Australia 'is well and truly behind' by 20–30 years.[3]
4.2
A study found that a number of leading Australian corporations
understand the importance of the employee share schemes for productivity.[4]
Employee share schemes can bring advantages to Australia's economy if they 'can
be transformed into broad based medium term savings vehicles' instead of
treating them as risk-based remuneration schemes. Employee share schemes are
also said to save jobs through capital investment, improving productivity,
facilitating strategic change and cost effectively remunerating staff.[5]
However, a submission suggested that legislators are seen to underestimate and
often 'completely' misunderstand 'the scale, strategic application and
importance of the employee share schemes'.[6]
Employee share schemes are said to enjoy and have enjoyed bipartisan support.[7]
4.3
The Remuneration Strategies Group noted that Australia should not miss
any further opportunities to develop employee ownership policies because 'Given
looming demographic pressure, any future failure to promote commitment and productivity
in the workplace will have a serious effect on this nation's prosperity and the
distribution of that prosperity'.[8]
The Australian Employee Ownership Association recommended the establishment of
an Employee Share Plan Promotional Unit to develop model or off-the-shelf plans
for employers and employees.[9]
Mr Fauvet thought a unit would help 'very definitely' and mentioned that they
are in existence overseas, for example in the UK, where there is 'a whole unit
dealing with share schemes' providing model plans etc.[10]
Committee view
4.4
Having heard the evidence to this inquiry, the committee sees benefit in
promoting employee share schemes in Australia and supports the Australian
Employee Ownership Association proposal of a promotional unit to encourage further
uptake of employee share schemes.
Data
4.5
Evidence to the inquiry was clear about the lack of current 'comprehensive
information on the number, nature and extent' of employee share schemes in
Australia. In the early 2000s, there was an Employee Share Ownership
Development Unit (ESODU) in the then-Department of Employment and Workplace
Relations, collecting data on the prevalence of employee share schemes, but it
was disbanded in the mid-2000s. The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) or
bodies such as the ATO or ASIC, despite their 'significant regulatory
responsibilities in the area', do not collect data.[11]
This has contributed to the near lack of:
...understanding of how businesses in Australia are structuring
their employee share ownership plans and how, if at all, they are integrating
employee share ownership into their broader human resource management
strategies.[12]
4.6
The lack of data also makes it 'difficult to identify whether the tax
rules operate to encourage or discourage employee share ownership'.[13]
4.7
Previously collected data and surveys conducted by various organisations
and companies are available but the information is hard to compare because of
the lack of standardisation. However, findings indicate that there is 'significant
diversity' regarding the type and nature of employee contribution and the conditions
that must be satisfied.[14]
Employee share schemes appear to be more likely in large and publicly listed
companies and companies with overseas offices and among full-time employees and
those with higher weekly earnings.[15]
An ASX survey found that only nine per cent of the surveyed adult shareholders
had obtained their shares through employee share schemes.[16]
4.8
A University of Melbourne study on Australian listed companies revealed
that more than half (57 per cent) of the companies that responded to the survey
'had at least one broad-based' employee share scheme. Broad-based schemes are
more common than narrow-based schemes and are structured to take advantage of
the $1,000 tax exemption. The most common type of equity was options (48.7 per
cent), closely followed by shares (46.7 per cent), and require a financial
contribution from the employee to participate.[17]
4.9
Executive equity schemes have grown in importance in Australia
particularly over the past decade and are 'a key strategic remuneration tool'
linked to company performance. According to a 2008 Hay Group survey, overall, 46
per cent of senior executive and 31 per cent of chief executive officer
incentive pay were subject to performance requirements.[18]
Mr Hetherington argued that 'the benefits of Australia's 15-year economic boom
have flowed disproportionately to investors (owners of capital) rather than
workers (owners of labour)', a situation which employee share schemes could alter
by offering employees access to returns on corporate profits.[19]
4.10
Remuneration Strategies Group noted that in 2002, 'a very high
proportion', estimated to be around 90 percent, of Australian listed companies
had an employee share scheme, including some executive-only plans. Only about
0.9 per cent of unlisted companies offered employee share schemes, as opposed
to 90 per cent of both listed and unlisted US companies. The value of
Australia's schemes was estimated to be between $3 billion and $4 billion, with
about $1.5 billion in executive schemes. A 'significant' proportion of the
total comes from a small number of very large firms.[20]
4.11
According to the 2004 ABS and the Employee Share Ownership Development
Unit (ESODU) survey, 10 per cent of Australian businesses had some form of employee
share scheme. Of nearly half a million employees in these businesses, 5.9 per
cent held shares as a form of employment benefit. Manufacturing industry had
the highest employee share scheme incidence (22 per cent), followed by finance
and insurance (19 per cent) and communication services (15 per cent). Employee
share schemes were least likely in the retail industry (14 per cent).[21]
4.12
According to a more recent CRA Plan Managers survey, 46 of the top 250
listed public companies issued securities under an employee share scheme in
June 2008, with the gross value of $162 million.[22]
4.13
Remuneration Strategies Group expressed concern that there is
'conflicting and limited data regarding the implementation' of employee share
schemes and 'no comprehensive (accurate) survey of the incidences' of the
various scheme types by business type in Australia.[23]
CRA Plan Managers submitted that 'detailed and properly funded research into
the benefits of employee equity participation in Australian should be a mandatory
precursor to any change'.[24]
Committee view
4.14
The committee notes the comments regarding the lack of recent data on employee
share schemes in Australia. It acknowledges the University of Melbourne's
project on employee share schemes and other surveys conducted by private
enterprises to collect data. Considering that the latest survey by a government
agency was conducted in 2004 and that there has apparently been an increase in
the uptake of the schemes since, the committee recommends that a new survey be
undertaken to establish the occurrence of employee share schemes in Australia.
The committee hopes that the survey standardises the terminology relating to
the various scheme types.
Recommendation 1
4.15
The committee recommends that in consultation with but not limited to
employee share ownership groups, unions and academics, the Australian Bureau of
Statistics conduct a survey of employee share schemes in Australia every five
years, starting at the end of the 2009–10 financial year. The survey should
collect data on, but not limited to, the following:
- number and type of employee share schemes;
- number, size and industry of companies offering these schemes;
- number of employees and equity held by them;
- breakdown of employees by occupation, educational level and wage;
- reasons for offering (employers) and participating (employees) in
the scheme;
- perceived effects and effectiveness of the schemes for both
employers and employees;
- perceived barriers in the take-up of the schemes; and
- breakdown of general employee (broad-based) versus executive (narrow)
schemes in terms of the number of shares offered; number of participants and equity
held.
Expanding take-up of employee share
schemes
4.16
Evidence to the inquiry seems to agree that there is room for further
uptake of employee share schemes in Australia. However, according to the
Australian Institute of Company Directors (AICD), the Government's proposal
'still does not adequately recognise the fundamental imperative to promote ongoing
share ownership'.[25]
4.17
The Institute of Chartered Accountants observed that a decade ago, the Government
'was actively encouraging Australian companies' to set up employee share
schemes, with funding available to government agencies to actively promote
them. This should be revisited to encourage the take-up of share schemes and
would require tax rules that do not 'unduly jeopardise' or serve as a
disincentive for employees.[26]
Impediments
4.18
Several impediments were identified in the evidence to the inquiry. They
include prospectus requirements, several pieces of legislation, public
awareness and perceptions.[27]
According to a number of witnesses, the governance framework—the standards and best
practice reward structures—should enhance the alignment of the long-term
interests of employer, employees and shareholders.[28]
Some witnesses also argued that the tax system should provide greater
concessionality to enhance employee share ownership.[29]
Solutions
4.19
Mr David Hetherington proposed linking share ownership schemes to
superannuation. This would involve employees being 'entitled to take up to one
fifth of their Superannuation Guarantee Contribution (SGC) in employee share
allocations where employers offer such plans'. This arrangement should receive
the same tax treatment as the SGC and the employee should be entitled to
'liquidate the shares after 10 years, rather than waiting until retirement'.[30]
Mr Price observed that through applying capital gains tax on gains or through a
rollover to superannuation, holding shares or other entitlements after their
vesting could 'be considered as a form of adding to national saving'.[31]
4.20
Following international examples, tax deductions could be provided for
the employer company to equal the value of rights and options provided to an
employee, with a cap of, for example, $10,000 per year per employee.[32]
Committee view
4.21
The committee notes the impediments and solutions above regarding
increasing the take-up of employee share schemes in Australia. It believes that
there is merit in further examining these options and urges the Government to
take note of these comments and adjust the legislation and policy accordingly.
It considers that using schemes as an alternative form of retirement savings
merits further examination, considering the increasing number of retirees in
Australia. The committee notes that legislation should have in-built safeguards
to ensure the spread of risk.
Comparison of Australian and overseas schemes
4.22
Overseas, employee share schemes are 'a significant workplace
phenomenon', particularly in the United States, Great Britain, France and
Japan.[33]
Details regarding the schemes in the US and the UK are in Appendix 3.
4.23
Similarly to the current situation in Australia, international
comparisons of employee share schemes are difficult with little data available and
studies not standardised.[34]
However, evidence to the inquiry identified certain differences or similarities
between Australian and overseas schemes.
4.24
The available data appear to suggest that while the incidence of schemes
in Australia is lower than that in the US or Europe, it is on the increase.[35]
Overseas, it is usual for companies to have three to five different plans at
the same time to meet different remuneration objectives and directed at
different levels of the organisation. In Australia, it is common for employers
to have two plans (tax-exempted and deferred) for the staff.[36]
4.25
As opposed to the US and the UK where 'tax structure favour [employee
share schemes] over ordinary equity investments', in Australia investments in
the share market are favoured over the employee share schemes despite their
'wider economic benefits'. Mr Hetherington called for share schemes to
'incentivise investment in employee-owned companies'.[37]
4.26
Australia's tax rules appear to be more complex than those in most other
countries.[38]
This is said to discourage or at least not encourage employee share schemes. Ms
Sarah Bernhardt, Tax Adviser to Rio Tinto Limited, noted that in the UK, taxing
of the options at exercise attracts a capital gains tax treatment which is
'deliberately offered as an incentive' to encourage people to participate in
the plan. In comparison, she noted that in Australia, employees are taxed 'on
exercise on everything they made' at their income rate, which left UK
participants 'in a much better position than the Australian participants'.[39]
4.27
The main difference between Australian and US schemes is that in
Australia schemes are limited to listed companies, whereas in the US 'the
overwhelming majority—according to some estimates, 90 per cent'—are unlisted
businesses.[40]
4.28
A comparison of six schemes in terms of returns to employees and impact
on government tax receipts and implications found that returns to employees in
the UK and US were far higher than in Australia (approximately 10 per cent
versus Australia's 5 per cent). In the UK and US schemes, tax exemptions and
government
co-contributions offset most of the taxes upon disposal whereas Australian
schemes suffer from the 'effective doubling of the tax rate on capital gains in
the tax-deferred scheme'.[41]
The study argued that the Australian tax-deferred scheme is 'deeply
unattractive' because 'the entire capital gain is taxable at the employee's
marginal income tax rate' rather than 50% of the gain being taxable (capital
gains tax), and saw 'no obvious economic rationale' for this. Thus, Australian
schemes 'deliver the highest tax receipts to government' due to higher tax
rates and lower tax discounts than in the US and the UK. The 'strong
correlation between returns enjoyed by employees and tax forgone by government'
suggests that in order to advance uptake of employee share schemes, the government
should forgo some of the tax revenue as employees join these schemes for
superior returns which rely on tax concessions.[42]
The Treasury noted that most of the countries that Australia would compare
itself to have arrangements for tax concessionality.[43]
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