Can Europe Pop the US CEO Pay Bubble?

by: Sarah Anderson  |  YES! Magazine

Can Europe Pop the US CEO Pay Bubble?
(Photo: ramenlover / Flickr)

    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. She directs the Institute for Policy Studies' Global Economy Project and is a co-author of the just-published IPS report, America's Bailout Barons: Taxpayers, High Finance, and the CEO Pay Bubble.

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All of these bankers, and

All of these bankers, and ALL republicans except Ron Paul, and well over half of the democrats in office have skills ONLY in lying, fraud and theft. No other training of any kind have they ever known. Criminality is their ONLY purpose in life. While it is understandable that the new administration has been cautious, even reluctant to prosecute them, it is clear to me that ultimately they MUST end up in prison because crime is the ONLY thing they know. Their continued thieving will not end until they are stripped of every penny and locked up. This 'give them enough rope to hang themselves' policy is frustrating indeed, but the final result will be the same. In progressive China the corrupt are executed. America's economy and social fabric will not recover until ALL of these pigs have been removed from the trough permanently.


Dream on! Modern government

Dream on! Modern government was specifically set up to protect these guys from having to take responsibility for the consequences of their actions. Until there is a fundamental re-assessment of just what is valuable in a society: education, protection of the weak and vulnerable, safeguarding the environment from corporate vandalism, as opposed to the pursuit of money with all other priorities rescinded - then there will be no change.


About 4000 bankers went to

About 4000 bankers went to jail for the S&L crisis. How many this time?


"progressive" China, yeah,

"progressive" China, yeah, they flood out some people, they oppress Tibetans and god knows what they'll do to these ethnics rioting now out west in China. Execution is a bit harsh, no? How lovely are work conditions in these China boom cities? Environmental protection? Give me a break. Utopias are not probable or possible. Flaws will always appear, power hungry, self-interested, greedy, will always exist, they are sprinkled about, they are as natural as red hair. It's all about social control. Some is blatant, as in China. Some subtle, subliminal, even. Our particular society is crumbling, mumbling inanities half the time, probably more.


modern pirates wear suit and

modern pirates wear suit and ties and have offices in major banking and insurance institutions... when will shareholders say enough and demand their bonuses? the payment vehicles these plutocrats reserve for themselves is out right theft and shareholders need to standup and demand better!


Here in England we hear that

Here in England we hear that bankers took(take) great risks that "deserve" great rewards, Strange that; I always thought risk involved the chance of great losses too... But these buggers gambled and lost OUR money, were bailed out with OUR money and STILL got rewarded for their FAILURE - with, you'll never guess: still more of OUR MONEY. BANKERS? no, indeed, THIEVES. Little crooks get arrested and imprisoned - really big ones get rewarded - out of the pockets of honest people.