Your question contains a big flaw and I'd like to stress it but noting else.
Who are those guys, the "best" programmers? Picking any criterion seems wrong, because programming covers many different domains and the "norm" is a complex multi-argument function noone can define. At least, you did not in your question.
You may argue that, even without strong definition, one can always tell who's the best programmer in the company. Well, for our company I can't tell this. Programmers solve different tasks and hardly have a chance to compete with each other.
For my company the answer is thereby 0%. Whoever is the best by your unexpressed criterion makes the impression of a cool guy with his or her talents and skills unmesurable with COCOMO or anything alike and thereby incomparable to those of his or her peers.