Unjustified Bonuses Paid By Taxpayers

No Gravatar

AIG bonuses are ‘an outrage’ says President Obama, and he speaks for us all.  How can the senior executives in AIG be so out of touch with reality that they rely on legal niceties to do what is so morally wrong?  Perhaps that lack of judgment and apparent unawareness of how the real world functions explains their appalling track record.  Well they seem to have shot themselves in both feet this time:

Barack Obama is vowing to pursue “every legal avenue” to stop a clutch of top executives at American International Group Inc. from pocketing multimillion-dollar bonuses, including some to employees who designed the risky credit instruments that helped topple the insurance giant.

The U.S. President joined congressional leaders and state regulators on Monday in demanding that the failed insurance giant, which has so far received more than $170-billion (U.S.) in government bailout cash, roll back $165-million in bonuses paid to employees over the weekend.  Outrage was the word of the day as news spread of the payouts, some reportedly as high as $6.5-million.

Not surprisingly, the Bonuses overshadow foreign bank payments, which could have drawn equally violent reactions.

When it emerged on Sunday that foreign banks had received more than $50bn of US federal funds as part of the AIG bail-out, big beneficiaries such as Deutsche Bank and Société Générale must have braced themselves for an outcry in Washington.

Any senior executive of any financial institution should have a keen awareness of what is going on around the world and consider carefully the most appropriate reactions. In the UK, the Financial Services Authority (FSA) will set out a banking clampdown.

Britain’s financial regulator, the FSA,  plans to clamp down on risky mortgage lending and City bonuses in a shake-up of banking rules due this week according to the British Sunday newspapers.

The FSA is planning a crackdown on management bonuses that reward short-term risk taking and will propose new rules on how banks should be run, including forcing them to hold more capital against risky trading, according to the Financial Sunday Express.  The regulator will also table new vetting procedures to ensure bank bosses are qualified to run financial institutions.

This follows up on assertion by the UK Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, that We won’t pay for bankers’ one-way bets.  He laid out a four-point plan to end the excesses of the bonus culture

Everywhere I go in Britain, I sense and share the anger and dismay of millions of hard-working people who have watched in disbelief during a year in which irresponsible practices in global banks have brought the world’s financial system close to collapse.  Only bold action to protect those endangered through no fault of their own will do.

Responsible senior bank executives should not need to have the politicians clamp down on them in this way.  It goes beyond the issue of legality, it is a simple question of morality.  President Obama has a massive popular movement supporting him as he tries to do whatever it takes to re-establish this in the financial world.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Yes, Yes Minister, Please, Please

No Gravatar

yesminister

Some  have pointed to the link between the global financial crisis and a general acceptance of corruption at high levels.  In that light, today’s item from the UK Daily Mail is a real embarrassment for the UK politicians.  It suggests that Extraordinary freebies are enjoyed by Britain’s mandarins.

Extraordinary details of the lavish hospitality enjoyed by top civil servants have been exposed.  Senior mandarins were wined and dined by blue-chip companies and treated to days at the races, nights at the opera and tickets to major sporting events.  Sir Brian Bender, one of the highest-ranking men in Whitehall, accepted invitations to 52 events  -  an average of one a week.

Remember that the same newspaper at the end of January was headlining the bonuses that Cabinet civil servants had received, so it would not appear that they really need the freebies.

Cabinet Office mandarins last year pocketed almost £ 1million in bonuses, it has emerged.  The senior civil servants received an average bonus of almost £9,300 each last year.  A total of 105 payouts were given at a cost to the taxpayer of £972,500.  The scale of the Whitehall bonus culture was met with dismay by campaigners, at a time when many workers fear losing their jobs in the recession.

We are living through extraordinary times and certainly it is not the time for business as usual.  Equally one would hope that we can get away from government as usual if this is the way it has been conducted.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,

Search the Internet for related articles:
Loading