Smaller pay cheques for the few women atop S&P 500 companies in 2022 as median compensation slips
- For the women who run companies in the S&P 500, compensation increased for more than half of them but the median pay package fell 6 per cent in 2022
- Drop comes a year after compensation reflected a recovering economy and soaring stock prices and profits

Last year was a mixed bag pay-wise for the women who run companies in the S&P 500 – compensation increased for more than half of them, but the median pay package fell 6 per cent.
Of the 343 CEOs in the compensation survey of S&P 500 companies done by the AP and Equilar, only 20 were women. Because they are a small group, changes in pay for only a few can easily skew the overall figures.
The drop comes after a 26 per cent jump in the value of pay packages for female CEOs in 2021, a year when compensation reflected a recovering economy and soaring stock prices and profits. Many chief executives were rewarded for steering their companies through the worst of the pandemic.
Overall, female CEOs saw their performance bonuses fall 13 per cent to US$2.8 million last year and stock awards fall 4 per cent to an average of US$10 million. Their median total compensation fell 6 per cent to US$14.7 million. The median pay for male CEOs rose 1 per cent to US$14.8 million.
“We still do not have enough women CEOs,” said Lorraine Hariton, President & CEO of Catalyst, a non-profit organisation focused on women in the workplace. “It’s hard to make a comment about pay when we really don’t have a big enough sample size.”
Lisa Su, CEO of Advanced Micro Devices, was the highest paid female CEO in the AP survey for the fourth year in a row, but she slipped to 26th highest paid overall, from 22nd last year. Su was the highest paid of all CEOs, men and women, in 2019.