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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Executive Pay and the Obscene Culture of Wall Street

By Sarah Anderson and Chuck Collins, AlterNet. Posted April 2, 2009.


Some expert talking points on an economy in crisis.
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What’s happening with the AIG bonus scandal?

Congressional action to recoup the $165 million in bonuses already handed out to AIG employees has been derailed.  On March 19, the House responded to public outrage by voting 328-93 to approve a bill that would impose a 90% tax on any bonuses given to employees at AIG and other firms that received more than $5 billion in bailout money.  However, when the White House expressed concerns about the bonus tax, the Senate punted the issue until after the April recess. Sensing the loss of momentum behind bonus taxes, the House voted on April 1 to approve a substantially weaker approach.  The new bill, which passed by a 247-171 margin, would place some limits on future bonuses, but would otherwise allow Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to determine whether employee compensation at the bailed out firms was "unreasonable" or "excessive." 

Who is to blame for the bailout bonus scandal?

There is plenty of blame to go around.  Executives of AIG and other Wall Street firms have acted like modernday Marie Antoinettes, so disconnected in their own little bubbles that they can’t respond to the crisis with human decency.  But we can’t let Congress off the hook.  They had ample opportunity to prevent this from happening by putting strict, measurable limits on compensation in the original bailout plans.  Instead they backed down to pressure from Treasury officials, first in the Bush administration and then in the Obama administration.  Congress’s inaction on excessive compensation over the past two decades has led to an increase in the gap between CEO and average worker pay from 41-to-1 in 1980 to 344-to-1 in 2007.

Should Congress tax back the bailout bonuses? 

The House proposal to tax bonuses at 90 percent was a better late than never option in response to their failure to protect taxpayers from such bailout profiteering.  Congress should also begin a debate about how to restore greater progressivity to the federal tax system, with steeper rates on higher incomes across the board and rolling back some of the Bush and Reagan era tax cuts at the top. At some point, there needs to be a clear plan on how to pay for the substantial investments our nation is making to address the recession and improve health care, education and energy systems.  We had high income taxes between the late 1930s and the early 1960s that accompanied a period of middle class prosperity and stability. Progressive taxes are one of the ways we can discourage speculation.

Is the public acting like crazed pitchfork populists? 

The public is waking up to the unaccountable and reckless practices and culture of Wall Street.  And they are furious at the ways in which politicians from both major parties have accepted this Wall Street mindset (along with millions in campaign contributions).  The American people don’t resent fair compensation for hard work or innovative achievements.  But for decades, we’ve watched a powerful elite rig the rules of the game in their own favor.   We should channel this anger into long-lasting reforms to ensure such abuses never happen again – and that the economy works for everyone, not just the superrich.

Isn’t the problem of executive compensation just symbolic? 

Runaway excessive pay is both a contributing cause of the economic crisis and a symptom of what is deeply off kilter with Wall Street culture.  Our executive pay system contributes to what President Obama has called the “quarter by quarter mentality” that has infected corporate American for several decades.  When top managers are rewarded for short-term gains –- and not long-term stewardship –- they are more likely to pursue fast gains through stock price manipulation, outsourcing, speculative investments, and other actions that have jeopardized the stability of our economy.

What are immediate reforms Congress should implement?

There are several immediate actions Congress could take today to remove the perverse incentives in the executive compensation system.

First, Congress should eliminate incentives in the tax code that encourage excessive pay.  They should pass the Income Equity Act, which would cap the amount of pay a company can deduct off their income taxes at either 25 times the pay of the lowest paid worker at a firm or $500,000.


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See more stories tagged with: wall street, economic crisis, executive compensation

Sarah Anderson and Chuck Collins of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) are also members of the New Economy Working Group, an initiative to stimulate bold thinking about a New Economy that serves the long-term needs of all our children, families, communities, and natural systems. IPS is also helping to form Common Security Clubs to help people come together to study the changing economy and help one another take action.  For more information on actions you can take, see IPS’s web site on extreme inequality.

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you would have to kill 2/3 of all american voters first...
Posted by: Annapurna1 on Apr 2, 2009 3:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
which im for doing..given the latest polls ..

americans heavily favour keeping corporate rule...

67% of americans favour 25% tax cap
..which amounts to a huge tax cut for the wealthy...

if we are to believe these results..then the "outrage" over AIG is without substance...

but if..as the polls suggest..american voters really do support fascism so overwhelmingly..then they should be treated as fair game by anyone wishing to inflict serious bodily injury and/or death on them...

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Take from Peter to give to Paul?
Posted by: Mrs. Jefferson on Apr 2, 2009 5:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The big international corporate banks are now in London. A small group of them started a Ponzi scheme. We pay them trillions of American tax dollars for "bailouts"? Bank CEOs walk off with huge bonuses and separation packages (even before Obama by Bush).

It is the biggest shift of wealth in our history.

Is this payoff to the Queen for Canada to be part of the Americas Union?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

How about a colour code for stocks which ones are based on real products
Posted by: RR#1 on Apr 2, 2009 10:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
as oppossed to derivatives, mark to market and outlaw bets on failure. Surely if Las Vegas can be regulated so can Wall Street, the only difference is you go in with you eyes wide open in Vegas, it is actually more moral than the hidden, "oh so complicated only this person can manage this particular portfolio" shameful, deceitful manner in which the trillions that went up in smoke in were derived. Not that people shouldn't be able to do that, but it cannot be apart of the legitimate economy, that way if they fail, oh well...sorry bout your luck and that person would get no more sympathy than someone who bet the farm in LV.

Cheers,
RR

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GoldmanSachs gets a woody
Posted by: weathered on Apr 3, 2009 1:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
arrogance has no bounds when MBA/CPA/JD crimes are committed w/impunity.

No Attorney General, no consequences and a business press that places Ugly on a pedestal.

Mukasey laughs in our face

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Political corruption...
Posted by: Retired OldGuy on Apr 3, 2009 2:28 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our economic problems are 100% political. Corrupt politicians are in the pocket of the bankers and have deregulated the system to the detriment of taxpayers. It is time for serious electoral reforms (see the link).

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» RE: Political corruption... Posted by: Joseph2
deadbeat billionaires
Posted by: mein kampf on Apr 8, 2009 3:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our real problem is not that we don't have enough money, our problem is, we have to much money and don't know what to do with it. But one thing is for sure, the rich will get richer and the poor will get poorer. Why? because Americans worship money and those with it. unfortunately the wealthy hate those same poor Americans. -Mein Kampf ---deadbeatbillionaires.com

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