SINGAPORE - Claims made on several online posts that Temasek Holdings chief executive and executive director Ho Ching's annual salary is around $100 million are false, the Government has said.
It has prompted Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat to instruct the Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act (Pofma) office to issue four correction directions on Sunday (April 19).
These are to The Online Citizen's Facebook page and website, The Temasek Review's Facebook page, fuckwarezone user "darksiedluv" and opposition politician and lawyer Lim Tean for sharing the falsehood on his Facebook page.
They had made various claims that Madam Ho's annual salary is "NT$ 2.1 billion", "about 100 million SGD" or "S$99 million a year".
In a statement published on its corporate website on Sunday, Temasek Holdings said: "There has been chatter based on an Asian talk show commentary, which claims that Ho Ching's annual salary is around $100 million. This claim is false.
"Furthermore, Ho Ching's annual compensation is neither the highest within Temasek, nor is she amongst the top five highest paid executives in Temasek."
Madam Ho is the wife of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.
The statement from the Pofma office added: "The Government does not set the remuneration of staff in Temasek; this is the responsibility of its board and management. The Government holds the board responsible for the long-term performance of its investments, net of expenses."
Temasek Holding's board committee, the Leadership Development and Compensation Committee (LDCC), is responsible for the establishment of guidelines and policies on performance measurement and compensation plans, it said.
"In addition, remuneration of the executive directors of Temasek Holdings is approved by LDCC and endorsed by its Board."
Temasek Holdings said in its statement that it has a long-term ownership mindset, which includes a "compensation framework to align employee and shareholder interests over economic cycles".
It added: "This is part of our ethos of doing the right thing, as a forward-looking institution.
"Incentives focus on long-term performance, and ensure employees share gains and pains alongside Temasek's shareholder during the economic cycles."
It also said in the statement that deferred compensation is an integral part of the organisation's compensation, and clawbacks have been applied during years where the performance requires it.
"We also review compensation practices across the financial industry annually. This is an added check to support talent attraction and retention, within the context of our compensation framework," it said.