Economy


Ethics in receiving bonuses -

President Barack Obama said Monday that he would “pursue every single legal avenue to block” $165 million in bonuses to American International Group Inc. employees who were in part responsible for the insurance giant’s near collapse. But hours later, administration officials said the payouts made Friday couldn’t be extracted from their recipients without a legal fight that would cost the taxpayers even more. Instead, officials said the White House will focus on ensuring taxpayers recoup the cost of the bonuses and, going forward, executive compensation at AIG would be on a much tighter leash. As leverage, the government said it would apply new rules to the next round of AIG bailout funds, a $30 billion infusion pledged earlier this month. But administration officials also worry that taking too hard a line with AIG and other companies could discourage top financial experts and institutions from joining the government efforts to fix the financial system. That’s one argument that AIG itself has used to justify the bonus payments: that if certain executives leave at this point, their departures would complicate efforts to wind down the financial-products division. The unit’s books contain many transactions that are “difficult to understand and manage,” according to an AIG document explaining the retention plan the company submitted with the Saturday letter to Mr. Geithner. “This is one reason replacing key traders and risk managers would not be practical on a large scale,” the document continued.
Yesterday, facing a political firestorm, President Barack Obama responded: “This is a corporation that finds itself in financial distress due to recklessness and greed,” he said. “Under these circumstances, it’s hard to understand how derivative traders at AIG warranted any bonuses, much less $165 million in extra pay.” He then said he instructed Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner to pursue “every single legal avenue” to cancel the bonuses. What went wrong? AIG was done in by credit default swaps and other derivatives tied to securities and corporate debt. When these financial instruments weakened, the company lost massive amounts of money. In the course of one night last September, AIG’s cash needs went from $20 billion to $80 billion. To meet these financial needs, the whole company was practically wiped out.
Some top employees of American International Group Inc.’s disgraced Financial Products group have agreed to return hefty retention bonuses under mounting public outrage over $165 million in payouts to a unit that brought the insurer to its knees.

$18 billion was paid of as bonuses and others to executives in banks in US that received public money, and that is the problem. You would ask to someone who failed to achieve a result to face a consequence, but this bankers seems didn’t know the word responsibility.

However, I found out an interesting fact from AP articles “Bankers vow to build trust with increased lending”. Citigroup’s Vikram Pandit asked his board of directors to pay him a $1 annual salary, with no bonuses, until Citigroup returns to profitability.

Although the financial crisis has been happening not only because of them but also the governments and borrowers also, but what Mr.Pandit’s doing is the least the executives can do to gain trust and confidence. But from 8 man only 1 man do that convince us that the real problem is on the greedy side of the human who benefit most in Financial Sector.

TIME has 12 answers

Charles Krauthammer & Benjamin Netanyahu should learn what is morality and fanatical ideology itself. Israel doesn’t have morality because it is:


Voice from Gaza :: Aid worker diary ::

From Haaretz:
“I keep the children away from the windows because the F-16s are in the air; I forbid them to play below because it’s dangerous. They’re bombing us from the sea and from the east, they’re bombing us from the air. When the telephone works, people tell us about relatives or friends who were killed. My wife cries all the time. At night she hugs the children and cries. It’s cold and the windows are open; there’s fire and smoke in open areas; at home there’s no water, no electricity, no heating gas. And you [the Israelis] say there’s no humanitarian crisis in Gaza. Tell me, are you normal?

Di Turki, “Muslims here used to be tested by poverty,” said Sehminur Aydin, an observant businesswoman and the daughter of a manufacturing magnate. “Now they’re being tested by wealth.”. Itu tadi sekelumit laporan IHT tentang kaum muslim Turki ditengah tekanan elit pendukung sekularisme yg kaya dan berkedudukan, serta dilema pilihan gaya hidup antara mewah atau sederhana.

(more…)

  1. Rusia bangkrut:
    World Bank: Russia may need help if oil falls more
  2. Arab Saudi defisit besar-besaran:
    Saudi to slash 2009 spending as budget deficit forecast

Associated Press (AP) has 3 reports about moral hazard in US government’s US$700B bailout policy to financial industry.

There is an interesting quote from Roger Cohen’s article in NYTimes.

The whole financial crisis is about the death of responsibility: the buck stopped nowhere. Everyone profited from toxic paper. Bernard Madoff, he of the alleged multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme, is only the latest example. Irresponsibility has also characterized Detroit. I don’t see how you restore responsibility with a bailout. Obama has a deeper task than changing the economy; he has to change the culture.

Forbes has report about Indonesia’s 40 Richest:
1. Sukanto Tanoto; 2. R. Budi Hartono; 3. Michael Hartono; 4. Putera Sampoerna; 5. Martua Sitorus; 6. Peter Sondakh; 7. Eddy William Katuari; 8. Eka Tjipta Widjaja; 9. Aburizal Bakrie; 10. Murdaya Poo

OK, to prove it I can show you the chronological event:

  • First, Al-Qaeda create a terror in UK
  • UK government than create anti-terror legislation
  • Economic crisis looming
  • Using the anti-terror legislation, UK govt seize Iceland Bank’s assets
  • Three months on, Iceland’s economy is in freefall.

Check this article from BBC:

“I still don’t understand why Britain had to resort to the use of such legislation, out of proportion with the problem at hand,” says Mr Haarde. “The freezing order is still in effect and has the Icelandic Landsbanki listed along with Al-Qaeda and the Taleban. “That’s unacceptable, and we’ve had no formal explanation as to why it had to be done in this way.”

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