Carlyle boss Kewsong Lee's pay was $16.4m last year and he will have to meet diversity targets. Photo: Christopher Goodney/Bloomberg Expand

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Carlyle boss Kewsong Lee's pay was $16.4m last year and he will have to meet diversity targets. Photo: Christopher Goodney/Bloomberg

Carlyle boss Kewsong Lee's pay was $16.4m last year and he will have to meet diversity targets. Photo: Christopher Goodney/Bloomberg

Carlyle boss Kewsong Lee's pay was $16.4m last year and he will have to meet diversity targets. Photo: Christopher Goodney/Bloomberg

Carlyle Group is the latest company to tie compensation of its chief executive officer to the firm’s performance on certain diversity and inclusion goals as corporate America doubles down on boosting underrepresented talent.

Kewsong Lee’s pay, which totaled $16.4m (€13.5m) last year, will be measured against a “comprehensive set of metrics” including the hiring and development of an inclusive culture, as well as meeting the company’s target of having 30pc of board seats of its portfolio companies filled by diverse candidates by 2023, according to Kara Helander, chief diversity, equity and inclusion officer at Carlyle.

Year-end performance bonuses will be contingent on meeting individual diversity objectives, a firm spokesperson said.

“Reviewing our progress in each of our groups around DEI has been part of our rhythm for the last few years,” Helander said in an interview.

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“What we’re doing now is we’re making it a more explicit part of our compensation across the board.”

The Black Lives Matter protests following George Floyd’s murder put pressure on corporate America to release workforce data and boost the ranks of women and people of color. Companies including Wells Fargo, Starbucks and McDonald’s Corp have recently rolled out plans to tie executive compensation to diversity targets.

Carlyle is also launching an incentive program that will reward employees who have stood out in their contributions to progressing diversity. Award recipients, who will be nominated by their peers and chosen by group heads, will either receive a grant of restricted stock units or cash.

The firm declined to specify how much money will be tied to the programmes. Carlyle says half its $260bn assets are managed by women.

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