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Can Europe Pop the U.S. CEO Pay Bubble?
Since the eruption of the economic crisis last fall, armies of corporate lobbyists have been battling to keep even modest changes in executive compensation rules off the legislative table. Their most common argument: pay restrictions will drive "top talent" out of U.S. firms and into the welcoming arms of higher-paying European companies.
This argument has always been laughable. Was it really a résumé-builder to lose trillions of dollars in financial wealth and drive the global economy off a cliff? Is that what makes one a hot commodity in the global labor pool? Were European companies, while shedding thousands of their own employees, really aggressively recruiting on Wall Street?
Ludicrous as they might sound, the financial industry's professed fears about losing their best and brightest seem to have had an impact in Washington. Whether policymakers actually believe these claims or not, they have failed so far to pass meaningful restrictions on executive compensation. Nearly a year into the economic crisis, the CEO pay bubble that was a key cause of the meltdown remains un-popped.
The executive pay "restrictions" put in place since last September affect only a small number of executives of firms that have collected funds from one of the federal government's bailout initiatives, the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP. And these pay rules contain gaping loopholes that have left the practice of mammoth executive pay packages largely intact.
In fact, many of the executives responsible for the crash are actually using the crisis as a springboard to their next fortunes. A just-released report that I co-authored at the Institute for Policy Studies, America's Bailout Barons, shows how it works. At 10 of the financial firms that are among the top recipients of bailout money, executives were awarded stock options early this year when the market was at the bottom. Now that taxpayer support has helped lift the price of their stock, the executives who brought the global economy to the brink of disaster now have seen their portfolios increase in value by $90 million.
European governments, however, may be about to let some of the air out of the U.S. CEO pay bubble. The French, German, and UK governments have recently adopted regulations on pay in the financial industry that go beyond U.S. restrictions. French banks will now have to spread bonus payments over three years; if a trader's investments lose money, the bonus won't be paid. In Germany, new rules set to go into effect on January 1 will also prohibit bonuses tied to short-term profits and require repayment if deals prove too risky. The UK government has banned guaranteed banker bonuses of more than one year and mandated that two-thirds of bonuses for senior employees be paid out over three years to discourage short-term risk-taking.
And now, French President Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel are speaking out forcefully for an international agreement to crack down on banker pay; they plan to press for this regulation at the Group of 20 meeting to be hosted by President Obama in Pittsburgh on September 24-25. Sarkozy said he'd like to see a fixed international limit on bonuses, as well as a bonus tax that could generate funds for use in times of crisis.
An obvious criticism of the European actions thus far is that they focus primarily on one form of compensation - bonuses - leaving open the possibility that firms will simply shift money from one kind of pay to another. But these actions still put them, particularly the French and German governments (both, by the way, led by governments the Europeans consider "conservatives"), clearly in the lead when it comes to reining in executive pay.
Looks like the foreign havens for earners of eight-figure bonuses are nothing but an illusion. What better offer do these executives have waiting in the wings? None at all.
Hopefully, by undercutting the U.S. financial industry's favorite argument against reform, the European governments will open up opportunities in Washington for real change to an executive compensation system that now threatens our economy and our democracy.
Sarah Anderson wrote this article as part of YES! Magazine's ongoing coverage of the New Economy



10 Comments so far
Show All"pay restrictions will drive 'top talent' out of U.S. firms"
Considering the truly remarkable contributions that have already been made by that "top talent" to the nation's financial and general wellbeing, I fail to see the threat.
If the Europeans really want them that badly (doubtful at best) I'd suggest that Americans should willingly subsidize their relocation expenses. If not, perhaps some remote island nation with excess prison accomodations could be persuaded to give them a new home.
The financial wizards are being compensated for their ability to continue the 30 year dismantling of New Deal financial regulations and their ability to bribe the elected officials who will never stop bailing them out.
Totally agree. Exactly the same underlying system of financial manipulation affects the Europeans at least as much as it does Americans. Perhaps even more so at the level of their ruling elites, although their mastery of certain subtleties seems to have progressed quite well in recent times.
With a little luck, perhaps we can find a remote island nation populated by cannibals.
The heads of these so-call banks (since way back when I worked at one of their World Headquarters, I have been saying that they are criminal conspiracies) remind me more and more of the Mafia in the Las Vegas of the 1960s -- they skim the money off the top and make off with it, usually competing with each other over who can have the most nice houses in the Hamptons.
Despite the thin and jittery (and jobless) recovery that we're supposed to be having right now, the damage these self-righteous, self-important crooks have done to and will continue doing to the economy will eventually send it all crashing and burning, taking what little hope for a future that we have with it (if environmental degradation doesn't do us in first -- a race to the wreckage).
I would love to see Americans "rise up" but I'm not quite sure what that would entail and how we would in practical terms go about it.
Sorry, no form of government intervention is going to change a thing. They always find a way to snake out of restrictions.
We need to literally SHAME CEO's into reasonable pay. And the way to do that is to work with one or two well known CEOs and convince them to voluntarily and PUBLICALLY lower their salary and bonuses. "I love (my country here), and I feel it's my patriotic duty to support my fellow employees...Therefore, from this time on, my own pay and bonuses, as well as my executive staff, will be limited to no greater than 25 times that of my lowest paid employees.".
William Rood, patriotic citizen of the world
The "no form of government intervention is going to change a thing" line is right-wing propaganda, and you have fallen for it. I recall from my '50s childhood growing up near some of the wealthier estates NE of Cleveland, many of the most opulent mansions had been shut down and converted to museums or public facilities of one sort or another. There was still great wealth, but after 10 years of Great Depression, 4 years of war and marginal income tax rates of 90%, many wealthy had decided that their most excessive displays of "conspicuous consumption" could no longer be afforded.
It was the tax laws that were used to bust Al Capone, so I guess they must have been a tad more enforceable than many of our other laws. I suspect conservatives foster this canard precisely because it is effective and caused the elites much pain.
Mmm. At least being "nouveau riche" has a stigma here. Ballsing up the bank accounts of Old Money can get you a bullet for breakfast.
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