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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Do credit unions have distinct objectives? Evidence from executive compensation structures

Jordan van Rijn,

Corresponding Author

Jordan van Rijn

University of Wisconsin-Madison, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics

Correspondence

Jordan van Rijn, University of Wisconsin-Madison College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, Agricultural and Applied Economics.

Email: vanrijn@wisc.edu

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Shuwei Zeng, Brent Hueth,

Brent Hueth

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service

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First published: 13 January 2022

Abstract

Credit unions compete directly with commercial banks in markets for consumer financial services yet receive an exemption from federal corporate income tax. Commercial banks claim that credit unions are no different than banks and that the credit union tax exemption represents an unfair competitive advantage. Credit unions counter that while they offer similar products and services, they differ from commercial banks in terms of structure and mission, given their not-for-profit, cooperative status. In this paper, we test for substantive differences in the objective functions of commercial banks and nonprofit credit unions by comparing CEO compensation structures. Drawing on the relevant principal–agent literature, we provide several arguments to support the hypotheses that credit union boards of directors establish lower-powered incentive contracts with their CEOs relative to similarly sized commercial banks, and offer lower total compensation. We find that credit union CEOs receive approximately 250% less performance-based compensation relative to CEOs of similarly sized community banks. Bank CEOs also earn approximately 15% to 20% more total compensation on average. The results are generally robust to controlling for CEO- and board-level characteristics, local economic conditions, and institution-level indicators of size, growth, complexity, liquidity and risk. The findings suggest important differences in incentive structures and objectives between banks and credit unions.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST & AUTHOR AGREEMENT

While working on this research project, Jordan van Rijn was employed by the Credit Union National Association (CUNA) as Senior Economist, and Shuwei Zeng was employed as a CUNA Research Fellow and is currently employed by Freddie Mac. Brent Hueth was employed at the UW-Madison Center for Cooperatives. No other funding was received for this research. All authors have seen and approved the final version being submitted, it represents our original work, and is not under consideration for publication elsewhere.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.