Netflix's top executives will now get paid in full no matter how the company does, thanks to the Republican tax plan.
The streaming-video provider is scrapping its cash bonuses, instead making the payments to top executives as salary.
The recently passed tax plan eliminates companies' ability to deduct performance-based bonuses to managers who are paid more than US$1 million (NZ$1.4m), so Netflix just decided to lump all cash payments into executives' salaries.
Netflix implemented the cash bonus structure in 2015 to take advantage of the tax deductions it could make at the time. In that year and in 2016, executives got either their full target bonus or slightly less. The data for 2017 isn't yet available.
Next year, Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos will get a salary of US$12m (NZ$17m), more than his salary and cash bonus target combined for 2017. Greg Peters, who was promoted this year to chief product officer, will get US$6m (NZ$8.4m) in salary, also bigger than his combined total for 2017.