- Psalm 146:3-7
I'm not sure if I'm in sync with most of our readers but, regarding the AIG bonus debacle, let me state where I stand: I'm for letting them keep their bonuses.
Do I like the situation? No. But I really, really like the rule of law.
From the inestimable Jonah Goldberg:
From what I can tell, the bonuses do stink — although some are as small as $1,000 and presumably go to people who had no significant part in the credit-default-swap-derivative mania of recent years. But let’s assume that they’re all gratuitous. Summers was still right.
When the federal government, on behalf of taxpayers, opted to essentially nationalize AIG — we now own 80 percent of the company — we made a choice to keep it alive. If the firm had gone out of business through bankruptcy — what the gods wanted in the first place — there would be no bonuses. But we chose not to do that. Which means those bonuses are just one more toxic debt for which we are on the hook. For good or ill, we chose to defy the natural order. And now we own this monstrous white elephant.
Here’s a good rule of thumb: When you buy an elephant, you can’t refuse to buy the manure that comes with it. You can try, but, soon enough, you’ll be knee-deep in problems anyway. And they’ll continue to pile up no matter how loudly you complain, “This isn’t what I paid for.”
Unfortunately, it looks like Summers is fighting a losing battle.
New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo is getting set to churn out subpoenas to investigate the bonuses. Rep. Elijah Cummings (D., Md.) demanded that AIG Chief Executive Edward Liddy, who came aboard after these contracts were signed and the company imploded, resign. Somehow I doubt that would make hiring a new caretaker any easier.
Meanwhile, Rep. Barney Frank (D., Mass.) wants to fire anyone who takes the bonuses. “These people may have a right to their bonuses. They don’t have a right to their jobs forever,” Frank said on NBC’s Today show Monday. “Forget about the legal matter here for a second. These bonuses are going to people who screwed this thing up enormously, who made terrible decisions.”
One wonders, given that logic, why Frank is accepting a congressional pay raise considering his role in the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debacle.
Later on Monday, President Obama caved to the populist chorus. He said he asked Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who also helped oversee the mess we’re in, to “pursue every single legal avenue to block these bonuses and make the American taxpayers whole.” Obama said all Americans ask “is that everyone, from Main Street to Wall Street to Washington, play by the same rules. That is an ethic that we have to demand.”
. . .
We should have learned from the government takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac what dangers lie ahead: The rule of law and political manipulation of the economy don’t mix well (Indeed, AIG’s toxic loans were made with considerable regulatory and political oversight). Liddy — the front-line sweeper behind the AIG elephant — has already warned the administration that letting politics dictate salaries and bonuses will make it difficult for the firm to retain talented staff.
But the unintended consequences surely won’t end there. What signal does it send when the president and Congress make it clear that they will revisit legal contracts that run afoul of populist outrage? Already, many banks that have received bailout money are returning it — or trying to — because the political strings attached hinder them against competitors. Worse, the highly politicized climate requires financial firms to become dependent on the whims of Washington, which can’t help thaw out frozen credit markets, particularly when Geithner has yet to explain what his actual policy will be.
Wells Fargo Chairman Richard Kovacevich, who was forced against his better judgment to take TARP funds, is livid with the Treasury secretary. “Is this America,” he asks, “when you do what your government asks you to do and then retroactively you also have additional conditions?”
The New York Times reports that the administration is worried about a coming “populist backlash.” It is right to be worried. But further blurring the lines between politics and the market isn’t the answer. That’s how we got in this mess in the first place.
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What's the point of bailing out a company only to torture it to death?
We keep AIG (and others) alive so we can impose so many regulations that they will ultimately fail. The logic is backwards and Barney Frank may be the most inept of the Congressional leadership. How he and Dodd have escaped responsibility for the mess we're in is almost a bigger political story than Obama getting elected.
Let them fail or keep them alive, but don't bring them back to life only to eliminate any form of life support. This is commercial, political water-boarding.
That was a zinger of a point about Frank. Other than that, I can't get too worked up about it. Ever since I got my first steady job years ago I've been ticked at outlandish corporate bonuses (boni?) for people who apparenty can't even be trusted to tie their own shoes correctly. But the people in congress griping about it are just grand standing. We (or I, anyway) never asked them to pursue any vendetta on our part. We just want the economy working again. They are lying too. They knew fully well this was going to happen, and this whole thing is a (intentional?) distraction.
It's slime vs. slime. May the best slime win.
That Congress is working on a tax law to isolate these hundred or so people and tax them at 90% should horrify everyone. If that passes, what is to stop the government from passing other punitive tax laws for people they don't like in the future? Say one that requires everyone who ever posted on a blog called Thinklings to pay 90%?
The reality is that someone is going to have to watch over and manage AIG over the next 5-10 years as they wind down and clean up a balance sheet of over a trillion dollars of investments and obligations. Even if they went into bankruptcy with no government bailout, someone would have to do that (i.e. the lawyers and court appointed trustees that likewise suck out hundreds of millions in fees in large bankruptcies). So where exactly are we going to get the brilliant angels that will do this work for $100,000 a year, while also being periodically called up to Washington to take a beating from grandstanding politicians?
Oh right, like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, we'll hire pure-as-snow Democratic politicians, that not only will take the huge salaries and bonuses, but also have no idea what they are doing.
They gave the keys to the car to the teenagers and then we acted shocked when they had a wreck.
The money was to help a company not to give vacation money to those who make a bit of money already. I was upset at the misuse but in no way that surprised. Many companies have asked their workers to take more pay cuts, and layoffs and while you’re at it please work harder because the folks you use to work with are unemployed. But hey be happy because the CEOs have more money.
We should have given boundaries too late to take the keys back now
two thoughts on this.
1- This is one reason that lawmakers should actually read bills before they vote for them.
2- Isn't that stimulus? Think about it. The people who get bonuses will either spend the money to buy stuff, which helps sustain other peoples' jobs, or they will invest it, which means stock will be bought which helps the stock market and the retirement accounts of the middle class.
If pumping money into the economy is stimulus, then who care's HOW it gets there?
Oh wait, unless you also have ideology tied to that money...but no one wants to admit that. But it's so obvious. They only want to pump money into the economy that ALSO accomplishes big government and liberal agenda.
Last night on the Tonight Show (don't get me started on this), Obama said he was stunned about the bonuses.
According to Senator Dodd, Obama's administration (or was it Bush's?) specifically asked that language be omitted from the amendment to the stimulus bill disabling such bonuses. (It was the same amendment that regulated the golden parachutes)
In whatever instance, Congress saw this coming a mile away. Either Obama was stunned out of ignorance, or he lied and wasn't really stunned at all since he knew about its possibility in advance. Which is worse?
I'm with you. Maybe for different reasons, but I'm with you.