Fern
Elite Member
- Sep 30, 2003
- 26,907
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Uhm, when i worked for IBM, Sam Palmisano was both the CEO and also the Chairman of the board, it' happens very frequently.
In fact, Sam Palmisano sat on Exxon's board while an ex-Exxon executive sat on IBM's board.
"To allow the CEO to be Chairman of the Board is recklessly stupid and undermines the entire concept of corporate governance."
LMAO. Open your eyes.
Edit: IBM's newest CEO is also chairman of the board
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ginni_Rometty
Edit 2: Good god, if conservatives knew how business really worked, you guys wouldn't be conservatives.
Can't help but act like an azz, can you?
OK, so I see that many boards have the CEO as the titular Chair, but almost all of these have a "lead/presiding director" that is not the CEO.
Just 3% of S&P 500 companies have neither an independent chairman nor a lead/presiding director, according to Spencer Stuart.
An example:
Earlier this year Goldman Sachs (GS) reached a compromise with a union pension fund over a proposal that would have caused CEO Lloyd Blankfein to lose his chairman title. Goldman agreed to appoint a lead director to bolster its oversight.
http://www.foxbusiness.com/business...rds-shift-toward-breaking-up-ceo-chair-roles/
Fern