Truthout Original

Any Pay Cuts on Wall Street Yet?

by: Dean Baker, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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(Photo: Emmanuel Dunand / AFP / Getty Images)

    Congress assured us that there would be no more big paychecks for incompetent Wall Street bankers when they passed their bailout bill. They told us that the tough pay provisions would put an end to the multimillion-dollar payouts to these folks.

    Last week, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson mailed $150 billion in checks to the big banks. From that point forward, the CEOs and all the other top executives of these banks are now our dependents. They are living off the tax dollars of schoolteachers in Iowa, truck drivers in Montana and even Joe the Plumber.

    It is difficult to understand why we should be taxing people who make $40,000 a year to boost the paychecks of bankers who make more than $1 million a year and in many cases more than $10 million a year. Senator McCain has called Senator Obama a socialist because Obama believes that it is O.K. to impose higher tax rates on rich people than poor people. Senator McCain considers this sort of redistribution unacceptable.

    But, if redistribution from the rich to the rest of the country is socialist, what do you call the upward redistribution that Congress approved in the bailout package? It's hard to justify taxing people who make $40,000 a year to benefit bankers who make more than 100 times as much.

    The Wall Street bailout was a classic, if totally foreseeable, bait and switch. The public has a real interest in ensuring the continued operation of the financial system. This was threatened by the credit crunch last month. This was the legitimate goal of the bailout.

    However, if Congress only wanted to preserve the financial system and not reward the people responsible for the financial crisis, it would have been a simple matter to impose safeguards to ensure that the bank executives were forced to take large pay cuts. While many members of Congress implied that the bill would rein in executive pay, almost all the experts who have examined the provisions on executive pay have concluded that they are largely toothless.

    The bailout also did not prevent the banks from paying out dividends to shareholders, as was done in the United Kingdom when they injected capital into their banks. This restriction makes sense not only as a punitive measure but also as a way to help the banks build capital. Every dollar paid out in dividends is a dollar that is not going towards building up capital. Stopping dividend payments should hasten the date at which the banks have sufficient capital without relying on help from the government.

    The failure to seriously restrict executive compensation or prohibit dividend payments, coupled with the relatively generous terms given the banks on the capital obtained from the government, shows that the bailout was not just about keeping the financial system operating. It was also about giving money to the banks' executives and their shareholders.

    The media seem to think this is all very funny. After having done public relations work to help get the bill through Congress, most major news outlets have not highlighted the fact that no bank executives are likely to get pay cuts as a result of the bailout. Nor have they highlighted the generous terms of the bailout compared to the UK.
The public should continue to follow this issue even if the media does not. They should keep asking the members of Congress who touted the pay restrictions in the bailout bill which executives are getting their pay cut.

    The public should also recognize that in the US economy, what you earn has little to do with your ability or the quality of your performance. It matters much more if you can get Congress and Henry Paulson to give you money. Just tell your kids to be sure to make good friends with powerful politicians.

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Dean Baker is the co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR). He is the author of "Plunder and Blunder: The Rise and Fall of The Bubble Economy." He also has a blog, "Beat the Press," where he discusses the media's coverage of economic issues. You can find it at the American Prospect's web site.

Comments

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Alaskadiva, right on!

Alaskadiva, right on! NOTHING changes until people take to the streets. All over the world, people protest their governments to bring about change, but we are too busy yaking on the cell phone. Kucinich is right, Wake up America! If the fat cats can't live without their bonuses, then they can jump. Trust me, there are many talented people waiting to run those companies, and they will do it for less.

AIG's new chief is cutting

AIG's new chief is cutting pay of executives and freezing or cutting bonuses.

A new depression will be

A new depression will be most difficult for those that have been spoiled by spending money on things besides food and shelter. In hard times people will barely have enough money for even food. Many will be forced to beg to eat. Mortgages and rents will have to be renegotiated. Savings accounts and financial investments will become worthless. The FDIC will be depleted of funds and deposits no longer insured. This will be the mother of all depressions. After billions have starved or died of disease a new era will be born. Those that are remaining shall have the knowledge of how to survive in hard times and never will they forget it. Stories will be told of a previous age of waste as a reminder to dreamers. A statue will be worshiped. It will be of a muscular angry man holding a sword pointing at the sky. Food and shelter will be plentiful and a new civilization born.

Forget the media; they work

Forget the media; they work for their corporate masters. Why isn't Congress (now out begging for your vote) yowling that no bank executives are getting pay cuts as a result of the bailout? Oh sorry; they work for their corporate paymasters too. The argument for paying these CEOs (even when government-owned) lavishly is that its the only way to attract the best and the brightest to these positions of managerial responsibility. But given the wonderful mess the current crop has got us into, these banks would be better off with Joe the Plumber at the helm!

Where is the outrage? It's

Where is the outrage? It's been channeled into fear that we'll get more of the same, so we don't go after Obama on this; it's fear that we'll end up with McCain, not only an arrogant rich man, but an impulsive and angry one. I don't pretend to know why Obama wasn't stronger on bank exec compensation. He did talk about it. If there are no safeguards, or few, then it was the accomodationists in Congress, the Democrats who felt they had to go along with what the administration was proposing, only make it better--which they did, if you remember Paulson's first draft. Obama did push for it, because something needed to be done, and fast, or at least everybody still thinks so. But Obama did not suspend his campaign, like McCain, to hover over his party leadership. He left the details to them. The devil's in the details. So we shoul demand correction on executive pay--the civil service rate suggested by some would be appropriate--for the bailout law as soon as possible. That's doable, and I bet it would pass the House, possibly the Senate, but they'll have to wait for the next session of Congress and hope Obama wins, because he'd sign it, especially if his progressive base makes noise, but Bush would never, never, in a million years.

I would like to have Robert

I would like to have Robert Reich, Paul Krugman, and Dean Baker over to dinner sometime. Maybe invite my legislators as well. Of course, if we could all get away from the boob tube long enough to act we could congregate in front of legislative offices holding signs in protest. Burn a few bankers in effigy and generally caricature the leggies as buffoon followers of these guys. Where the hell is the outrage anymore? Don't you people remember how to effectively get their attention? Mass protests, sign waving, sit-ins, cordless mikes, soap box lecturers on street corners - this is the kind of activity that gets media attention and the leggies in a twist. Email campaigns are a waste of time. It's not the digital tools that will win this war, but, real live people yelling on the streets that "I'm mad as hell and I'm not gonna take it anymore!" Brooke

"FASCISM!" The answer to

"FASCISM!" The answer to Dean Baker's rhetorical question: "But, if redistribution from the rich to the rest of the country is socialist, what do you call the upward redistribution that Congress approved in the bailout package?"

I've been watching this

I've been watching this pseudo-debate unfold and it's driving me mad! People decry McCain because he wants to give tax breaks to Corporate America, but which candidate is MOST responsible for passage of the $700 billion taxpayer giveaway? It's not McCain, but Barack Obama!! Barack personally contacted many Dems in the US House to get them to switch their votes. So, in this weirdest of election years, it's the Democrats, not the Republicans, who are madly redistributing money from the poor to the rich. Think about this. John McCain wants to provide tax breaks so corporations can keep more money at the end of the day. Barack Obama is pushing this scheme to hand the money to them outright. I don't know about the rest of you, but it seems like six on one hand and a half a dozen on the other. At the end of the day, regardless of which strategy is employed, bucket loads of OUR money is landing in THEIR pockets. Obama is as much a part of the problem as McCain is.

All the executives of the

All the executives of the firms that were bailed out should immediately be compensated according to the Civil Service pay and benefits scale. After all, they're effectively government employees now. Why should we, the taxpayers, subsidize their lavish salaries, benefits, and perks?

Read Dean Baker's take on

Read Dean Baker's take on the American economy: Conservative Nanny State http://www.conservativenannystate.com/

Correct me if I'm wrong, but

Correct me if I'm wrong, but if the federal government took over the banks with this "bailout" using our tax money, aren't the CEO's now government employees? In what alternate universe do Govt. employees make tens of millions a year? They should have their pay reduced to that of "Joe 6 Pack" tax payer. You were never going to see any penalties or sanctions in the bailout bill because these same men give hundreds of thousands of dollars to campaigns of both parties. This is most definitely upward socialism, or as a previous comment stated FEUDALISM. When the top 5% of the population has 95% of the wealth, what else can it be called?

What is the upward

What is the upward distribution of wealth called? I believe it is called Feudalism.

This is Fascism, not

This is Fascism, not Socialism. In Socialism, proceeding foreclosures would be frozen, and the CEOs would have already been fired and replaced by government managers making one tenth of the pay of these bloated pigs!

Did anyone read the Guardian

Did anyone read the Guardian UK article here in truthout about how the CEO's of these major bailout companies are going to reap 70 billion dollars in executive pay, 10% of the bailout package?

We'd better stop complaining

We'd better stop complaining and start thinking of ourselves as shareholders in these institutions. Our representives must know that we are watching and waiting for the replacement of the CEO's and arrogant fat cats, with leaders who can take the public interest to heart.

The ultimate Republican

The ultimate Republican neocon reality: using government tax revenues, or, even worse, borrowed billions, to channel money to your insider friends. Crony capitalism lives! And what's REALLY happening with "Joe Sixpack"? Is the government working in his self-interest?

Congressman Dennis Kucinich

Congressman Dennis Kucinich and Nobel prize winner Joseph Stiglitz explained this all quite well. Robert Kennedy Jr. has explained how the corporate media prints what it deems is good for corporations, even if it has little relation to facts. I learned it was easier to train people with a TV than it is to train a dog with sweets and love when I was a young exec just out of college. The congress has a lower rating than Bush precisely because people know what's being done to them even if they don't fully comprehend the how and why. The next step is that the public simply loses interest in people who call themselves honorable sirs and madams. Cordially, Garrett

before the bailout vote, I

before the bailout vote, I emailed my representative and my two senators saying that the bailout bill was fine with me, IF it included the proviso that the top people in the companies that were taken over would be paid the same salary as a high school business teacher at whatever school district the company chose to match salaries with. I have not heard a response from them. Yet.

Once again, the Bush

Once again, the Bush Administration, w/the assistance of Congress, transfers more wealth to the upper 5%. What a surprise. The only surprise is that people believed Bush or Congress might behave differently. Time to get rid of all of them, but a few, like DeFazio, who suggested a different course. But instead, too many people will listen to Palin & Bachmann accusing Senator Obama of "socialism" & "anti-Americanism" like they even know what those terms are generally considered to mean.

Ain't it the truth? I think

Ain't it the truth? I think I read somewhere that Dean Baker had some minor role as an adviser to Obama on economic issues. I wish it were much more than that. He is consistently sharp in his assessments, and we really need someone in the administration who understands what is going on and will fight wholeheartedly for ordinary people.