BASF Report 2022

Compensation and Benefits

We want to attract and retain engaged and qualified employees, and motivate them to achieve top performance with a total offer package that includes market-oriented compensation, individual development opportunities and a good working environment. Our employees’ compensation is based on global compensation principles according to position, market and performance. As a rule, compensation comprises fixed and variable components as well as benefits that often exceed legal requirements. In many countries, these benefits include company pension benefits, supplementary health insurance and share programs. We regularly review our compensation systems at the global and local levels.

We want our employees to contribute to the company’s success. This is why the compensation granted to the vast majority of our employees includes variable compensation components, with which they participate in the success of the BASF Group as a whole and are recognized for their individual performance. The same principles essentially apply for all employees worldwide. The amount of the variable component is determined by economic success as well as the employee’s individual performance. We use the BASF Group’s return on capital employed (ROCE) to measure economic success for the purposes of variable compensation. This links variable compensation to our ROCE target.1 Individual performance is assessed as part of a globally consistent performance management process. In numerous Group companies, our “plus” share program ensures employees’ long-term participation in the company’s success through incentive shares. In 2022, for example, around 27,100 employees worldwide (2021: around 23,600) participated in the “plus” share program.

BASF offers senior executives the opportunity to participate in a long-term incentive (LTI) program2 in the form of a performance share plan. The LTI program has a term of four years and takes into account the development of the total shareholder return. It incen­tivizes the achievement of strategic growth, profitability and sustainability targets. To take part in this program, participants must hold BASF shares, the amount of which is based on their individual fixed compensation. In 2022, around 94% of the people eligible to participate in the LTI around the world did so, holding between 30% and 70% of their fixed annual compensation in BASF shares. The share price-based compensation program (BASF Option Program, BOP), which had existed since 1999, was offered for the last time in 2020.

1 In calculating compensation-relevant ROCE, adjustments are made for negative and positive special items resulting from acquisitions and divestitures (for example, integration costs in connection with acquisitions and gains or losses from the divestiture of businesses) when these exceed a corridor of +/–1% of the average cost of capital basis. An adjustment of the compensation-relevant ROCE (in the first 12 months after closing) therefore only occurs in cases of exceptionally high special items resulting from acquisitions and divestitures.

2 The LTI program referred to here is aimed at management levels 2 to 4 as well as individual employees who have attained senior executive status by virtue of special expertise.

Personnel expenses

Expenses for wages and salaries, social security contributions and assistance, as well as for pensions totaled €11,400 million in 2022. In the previous year, these amounted to €11,097 million. The rise was mainly attributable to a higher wage and salary level, currency effects, particularly from the U.S. dollar, as well as a higher average number of employees. Declining bonus provisions and lower pension expenses had an offsetting effect.

BASF Group personnel expenses (Million €)

 

2022

2021

+/–

Wages and salaries

9,102

8,847

+2.9%

Social security contributions and assistance expenses

1,598

1,519

+5.2%

Pension expenses

701

732

–4.2%

Total personnel expenses

11,400

11,097

+2.7%

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