Here is an interesting article basically highlighting the lives of high end bank executives. The poor guys will be in poverty if Obama gets his way. Top executives would have their salaries limited to $500k/yr if their firm accepts bailout money. I wish I knew what it was like to face that type of hardship. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/08/fashion/08halfmill.html?_r=1&em
2/9/2009 4:10:38 PM
but you're not a ceo
2/9/2009 4:12:12 PM
loaded question much
2/9/2009 4:12:40 PM
I could make it work
2/9/2009 4:14:22 PM
I didn't see any mention of: Stock optionsLimit their salary and pay them with more stock in their companies and maybe it will give them an incentive to perform better. Make sense to me.
2/9/2009 4:21:10 PM
I'd have to cut back on expenses, but I think I could squeeze by.
2/9/2009 4:22:17 PM
2/9/2009 4:31:24 PM
i don't know, but if i can get a book deal to bankroll it i'll be happy to try
2/9/2009 4:31:39 PM
I have actually been wondering what the finances of someone who makes millions a year looks like, and i'm glad someone put some numbers to it.However, it doesn't really give me any sympathy for them, because if I costed my organization thousands of times my salary, I would be out of a job.Plus, there are enough loopholes that they are going to can get compensated in other ways, and it would put some pressure on them to perform.I'd be really surprised as well that someone in that position wouldn't have considerable income from capital gains, especially now that capital gains tax are well below their normal tax rate.
2/9/2009 4:36:42 PM
2/9/2009 4:42:03 PM
Might have to cancel your yacht club membership
2/9/2009 5:03:48 PM
That article was pretty stupid, and no I have no sympathy for them.
2/9/2009 5:18:41 PM
2/9/2009 5:28:59 PM
these people failed at their jobs. so fuck em
2/9/2009 5:48:27 PM
2/9/2009 6:04:56 PM
A Brooks Brothers suit usually runs about 800-900 for their regular suit, and about 1800 for their higher end, superior quality Golden Fleece line of suits.
2/9/2009 7:43:11 PM
Yeah -- here's their loophole: They'll quit and work somewhere else.
2/9/2009 7:50:04 PM
http://chrisyeh.blogspot.com/2008/11/why-bail-out-banks-but-not-autoworkers.html
2/9/2009 8:03:59 PM
The real question is, "could you actually do something that was worth $500k per year?" For most of us the answer is probably a decided NO. There is a reason that a CEO's salary should be insulated from performance. No one would ever take risks or innovate if they were going to get immediately shit canned. In business, at a certain level, you have to be bold. It's not easy to make a decision that can make or break a multi million or multi billion dollar business.Should guys get canned if they screw up? Sure, but let's not act like putting some schmoe in charge (which is what you'd get if you offered to pay the CEO the same as the company's average worker as I've heard some dumbasses suggest) would do anything other than spell certain disaster.
2/9/2009 8:13:37 PM
Not that I have any real sympathy for these people, but something that I thought was a bit interesting and some food for thought.Most of these guys worth is tied into stocks and other compensation, so all you do by cutting into their salary is eat up disposable income. You, me and everyone else, when our money gets tight, we cut spending but you or I cutting spending doesn't mean a whole lot in the grand scheme of things. On the other hand, lets say these guys cut their spending, lets look at some consequences:Cut out the private school: Increase the students in an already over burdened public school system WITHOUT and increase in funds (remember, they already pay for the school system even though they don't use it). In the mean time, the public schools won't hire additional teachers, and the private schools will likely fire some.Cut out the nanny: Add one to the unemployment lineCut out the driver: Add one to the unemployment lineCut the personal trainer: One guy just saw his yearly income take a 12k cutCut the tutoring costs: One gal just saw her income take a 3k cutSo, assuming that we got our wish, and punished the evil banker and cut his salary and forced him to live a (semi) normal life, we would also have successfully put two other people out of a job, cut the incomes of two others, increased the burdens on your kids teachers and brought some other folks close to losing their jobs or taking a pay cut. And that doesn't really account for all the people who work in all the luxury resorts, spas and other places that take these chumps money.Again, no sympathy for them, but is some feel good legislation really worth taking people's jobs?
2/9/2009 8:38:53 PM
2/9/2009 8:51:03 PM
2/9/2009 9:06:42 PM
Well sure, I would agree but of course that requires that it not be taken away in taxes and paying back the debts and keeping the company solvent in the first place. Interesting thought, I wonder which process loses the most money to taxes. Taking $1 million that the company has to pay out and paying it to one CEO or to 20 employees.
2/9/2009 9:21:16 PM
2/9/2009 9:57:19 PM
I currently live on $13,000 a year, so I think I could manage.
2/9/2009 10:06:39 PM
2/9/2009 10:17:45 PM
How is he not a successful capitalist?
2/9/2009 10:27:06 PM
I'm assuming his income roughly matches his spending. If he's putting thousands in savings each month, I'll issue a retraction.
2/9/2009 10:38:00 PM
I think that these CEOs that have been making multi-millions for the past few years can dip into their savings. Surely they've handled their money responsibly and haven't squandered it all away.I'm not comfortable giving these CEOs billions in bailout money, then having them get that money straight into their pocket. There's a reason that they needed TARP, and it's not to give them bonuses.
2/9/2009 10:42:52 PM
2/9/2009 11:23:18 PM
2/10/2009 12:00:35 AM
2/10/2009 1:25:57 AM
A bank CEO with a functioning Y-chromosome:http://www.miamiherald.com/460/story/904842.html
2/16/2009 6:13:51 PM
$60 million? Fuck that, he clearly got that by oppressing the masses. Limit him to $500k and take the rest in taxes so that we can give his employees more $400 stimulus checks.
2/16/2009 9:14:05 PM
yes. truly. because clearly this sort of behavior is the norm in corporate america.
2/16/2009 9:37:34 PM
^^
2/17/2009 7:26:21 AM
2/17/2009 9:38:48 AM
2/17/2009 2:07:01 PM
2/17/2009 5:25:54 PM
From that article about the Miami banker:
2/18/2009 12:16:13 PM
2/18/2009 1:29:21 PM
We are talking about being VP of a bank here, not flipping burgers. Care to explain anything, or just insult?
2/19/2009 7:04:47 PM
^Networking and having people like you.... You need that more than you need an education. We have countless examples of such stories where I work.
2/20/2009 10:37:59 AM
http://www.charlotteobserver.com/business/story/548550.htmlThis guy can do it
2/20/2009 4:07:04 PM
^^ i understand such things, but i thought professional jobs had minimum qualifications, such as a bachelor's degree. well, they do now, so i guess in those days, not. fair enough.
2/21/2009 6:11:29 PM
I'm a raging capitalist and don't get into the class envy thing that a lot of people do. If someone is filthy, ridiculously rich...well, good for him. Hopefully I will be too, someday. If not, that doesn't make it right to begrudge the "haves".That said, for companies that are taking bailout money, i have no problem with any limit on their executive pay. The buck stops with the CEO, and they failed to meet the bottom line. I'm paying for their companies (largely against my will), so I don't really care if the CEO takes a big pay cut after screwing up.and yeah, I could have a really, really good time on $500k/year. I worked out a budget one time for half that amount, and it amounted to a very nice lifestyle...I could really get on board with a half-million per year. Even in Manhattan, you could live awesomely (I wouldn't have much use for a personal trainer or a 2nd home, and certainly not a chauffeur or limousine--I wouldn't even want that if money was completely unlimited).
2/21/2009 6:38:33 PM
Honestly, I wish they had gone further. If we are going to reward loser companies, should have gotten rid of most of their upper management. You at least need to replicate some of the punishments that they otherwise would have gotten for failing in business.[Edited on February 21, 2009 at 6:55 PM. Reason : .]
2/21/2009 6:53:27 PM
2/23/2009 8:35:33 AM
set em up
2/23/2009 5:39:14 PM