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     Oct 29, 2009
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Bring on the banking dullards
By Julian Delasantellis

There was nothing in the background of the late senator, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, that would indicate just how far off the reservation he would travel in his life, that he would become, in essence, one of the first neo-conservatives.

Raised in a time and fashion that mainly produced apparatchiks for the welfare state, Moynihan set his own course very young. As an assistant secretary of labor during the John F Kennedy and part of the Lyndon B Johnson administrations, he wrote reports suggesting that the American poor might be at least partially responsible for their predicament, an outrageous apostasy from the then dominant liberal canon.

He later went on to be US ambassador to the United Nations (1975-76) and the first in that position who believed that he fulfilled

  

his charge by insulting the Third World. Later, as a Democratic senator from New York state, he played a key role in torpedoing the Bill and Hillary Clinton healthcare initiative of 1993-94, arguing that it was more important to cut the poor's public assistance benefits than to give them healthcare.

In a 1993 article in The American Spectator called "Defining Deviancy Down", Moynihan noted how standards of public conduct and deportment had seemingly declined over the recent past; once it would have been outrageous for suburban men to attend a neighborhood barbecue in something other than a suit and tie; now, people attended nationally televised sporting events in garb that would make strippers quake and the homeless blanche.

But what can be worse than the current situation, where it's hard to find a public space not bathed in eau de cologne de urine. This is another feature of modern life - how competency has been defined down; way, way down. This becomes obvious in the renewed debate over executive salary and benefits that erupted in Washington last week.

United States President Barack Obama may be a lot of things, but a populist is not one of them. His economic stimulus plan drove millions who once thought that anything in the shopping aisle except Maxwell House was carcinogenic into buying teabags; his health plan has stoked fears that Houston hearts were going to be forcibly removed for shipment and transplant in Hanoi. His cap-and-trade proposals for global warming raise fears that automobile drivers and other consumers will have to pay more for petroleum products. Obama has made little attempt to counter the cap-and-trade fears, probably because, at their heart, they're true.

But one area where the administration has hit the American public's nerve, just as sure as fugitive Nazi dentist Christian Szell (Laurence Olivier) could hit the spot in Marathon Man, is in the area of financial-sector executive compensation. After getting burned on the issue early in his term with the flap over senior executive bonuses at bankrupt and now government-owned AIG, it is obvious that Obama has radically changed tack.

Maybe the long summer the Obama team spent having the health insurance industry clean the soles of shoes by rubbing on their suits whatever they picked up in the gutter has finally focused their minds a bit. Maybe they finally realized that, in actuality, both the individual faculty of the Harvard University Economics Department and the members of the group who put a handmade sign on a Chicago bridge calling for the government to "Jail 'Em - Don't Bail 'Em" during a bankers' convention have exactly the same number of votes - one.

The media have taken to calling government officials with purview across different departmental jurisdictions "czars", so, naturally, there is a czar, Kenneth I (otherwise known as corporate lawyer Kenneth Feinberg) to deal with issues of executive compensation regarding the seven companies with outstanding Troubled Asset Relieve Program (TARP) loans from the government. These are Chrysler, GM, GMAC (General Motors' lending arm), Chrysler Financial, AIG, Citigroup and Bank of America.

On Friday, Feinberg produced a report with his recommendations for action. Suddenly, at least among those affected by the process, the relentless snickering by those who derided the president as a weak-kneed "Obambi" were nowhere to be heard.

For the top 25 paid executives of the seven, reading the Feinberg proposals must have seemed like an invitation to be extras in a new movie about the gulag. Cash salaries are to be capped at US$500,000; an average 90% pay cut. Cash bonuses that wildly fluctuate from quarter to quarter are to be eliminated in favor of grants of stock that cannot be cashed out for an extended period of time, thus giving the recipient an interest in the company's longer-term performance and viability.

No grants of stock bonuses will be permitted until the company has fully repaid its TARP obligations, and no attempt to evade the restrictions through donations to severance or retirement accounts will be tolerated. Maybe it wasn't the Winter Palace being stormed, but, at the very least, the ski-lift lines at Vail should be that much more reasonable this season.

Although it is true that, as the detractors of the plan put it, Czar Kenneth's plan to re-indenture the serfs of Wall Street only applies to 25 people, on Thursday the US Federal Reserve released new guidelines that sought to "ensure that compensation packages appropriately tie rewards to longer-term performance and do not create undue risk for the firm or the financial system". These would not be limited and applicable to just a few, but to "all employees who have the ability to materially affect the risk profile of an organization, either individually, or as part of a group".

If fully implemented, these proposals could lead to one of the greatest changes in the relationship of the American elite to the masses in half a century, perhaps more. No longer would the elite's status be mostly predicated on what they could do for themselves or for their bank in the short term. Now, some consideration would have to be provided for the long-term soundness of the bank, and, by extension, society as well. [1]

But, like the Czarina Alexandra complaining about the cold in the Yekaterinburg root cellar where she and her family were about to be shot, some of the ancien regime just don't seem to get it. "Mr President", one reportedly complained to Obama after the outlines of the plan became known. "Last year I made $30 million, but under these arrangements I'll only make $10 million. How is this fair?" he asked the chief executive of a nation with now over 15 million people unemployed.

On hearing this, and knowing Obama's penchant for cooperation among the Group of 20 countries now charged with guiding the global economy, I wonder if he was ever tempted to call British Prime Minister Gordon Brown to inquire as to whether Monty Python's Flying Circus still had any nominating forms left over for this year's Upper Class Twit of the Year prize.

Like borscht, charges of "communist" and "Trotskyite" flew thick through the air on release of the Treasury and Federal Reserve initiatives. That should not be all that surprising; similar charges dog this president when he tells toddlers to brush their teeth.

A more reasoned objection that gets to the more substantive neo-conservative objections in this was to be found on the blog of National Review Online, the "Corner".
Three things about the Obama administration's publicity-seeking move to curb executives' pay at bailed-out companies: It is inevitable, it is stupid, and it is inevitably stupid ... The most highly sought-after talent surely will exit the targeted companies and, short of giving some presidential czar or another the power to reduce executives to indentured servitude, there is nothing that the government can do to stop them from taking very lucrative positions at firms free of the TARP taint. Wall Street is powered by financial innovation, and we are willing to bet that billion-dollar performers will be able to connect with multimillion-dollar paychecks, even under the stern gaze of the people's tribunes ... Who wants to do business with a firm that cannot pay top talent what it commands on the open market?

Continued 1 2  


New normal' will be a painful place
(Jul 23, '09)

Born again - and again (Apr 2, '09)


1. Gates gets grumpy in Tokyo

2. Welcome to 2025

3. As ASEAN dithers, the US circles

4. India lost in 'love jihad'

5. Beijing runs a diplomatic marathon

6. Kerry argues for counter-insurgency lite

7. Where have the savers gone?

8. Afghan fury at Koran burning claims

9. China challenge for African prosperity

10. US threats prompted Iran nuclear facility

(24 hours to 11:59pm ET, Oct 27, 2009)

 
 


 

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