Banks given go-ahead to pay unlimited bonuses - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Money, Banking, Finance, and Insurance (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-7.html) +--- Thread: Banks given go-ahead to pay unlimited bonuses (/thread-5338.html) |
Banks given go-ahead to pay unlimited bonuses - Magda Hassan - 11-01-2011 Ministers cave in to City and reject calls to tackle highest earners as No 10 seeks face-saving deal
Banks given go-ahead to pay unlimited bonuses - David Guyatt - 11-01-2011 Bob Diamond, President and Deputy Group Chief Executive of Barclays bank Plc is currently giving evidence before the Treasury Select Committee hearing about competition. Asked if he was grateful to British taxpayers for the banking bailout, repeatedly declined to answer that question, repeatedly saying instead that he was grateful to the worlds central banks. Shades of Quigley Carroll's "Tragedy & Hope" anyone? PS, the Britsh taxpayer provides the sustenance to ensure that banks too big too fail, do not fail - even if and when their casino operations are poorly - or even disastrously - managed and are structured to just benefit bankers bonus pools - at the cost of the taxpayer. Despite the recent bankers bail out, the thing that is becoming ever clearer is that bankers simply don't give a toss what the British (or any other sovereign) taxpayer has to suffer to ensure they continue to get their bonuses. Banks given go-ahead to pay unlimited bonuses - David Guyatt - 11-01-2011 I think what this proves - beyond a shadow of doubt, in fact - is who really rules us. Everyone, bankers, politicians and even window-cleaners are aware of the immense dislike - bordering on hate - that is reserved for bankers by the public in these times. But all that is tossed aside to cater to the greed needs of the City. The word "disgrace" doesn't do this justice. It's an immense travesty of public disrespect by Cameron, Clegg and the others who are supposed to act as stewards of us citizens. Banks given go-ahead to pay unlimited bonuses - Magda Hassan - 13-01-2011 Mark Steel: We owe it to bankers to feel their pain Wednesday, 12 January 2011 At last someone has dared to defend the oppressed people of the banking community. Bob Diamond, chief executive of Barclays, who himself has to suffer the trauma of an £8m bonus, said yesterday that the bankers' "period of remorse and apology should be over". And you feel his pain, because the first words to cross your mind when you see a banker are "remorseful and apologetic". Then you're left worrying, "Oh, how I wish the poor souls were slightly less burdened with remorse about their bonus, and didn't apologise with such agonising sincerity about putting it into their wife's name in a series of untraceable accounts based in uninhabitable islands off Ecuador." But at last they've learnt to stand up for themselves, and Bob Diamond has emerged as their Martin Luther King. Soon the whole banking community will declare: "Say it out loud, I'm 27 million quid in the black and I'm proud." Eventually some of them will feel able to come forward with stories of their plight, of how they were ashamed to tell even their parents they were a hedge fund manager, and at weekends they would lie to their friends by saying they were putting up shelves when in fact they were flying to the Indian Ocean to buy one of the Maldive Islands. Already Bankers' Rights activist Lord Jones of HSBC has protested that bankers who received smaller bonuses last year received "not one jot of praise". Isn't that always the way? It was the same with Ronnie Biggs. Everyone goes on about the year he robbed a train but no one gives him credit for all the years he DIDN'T rob any trains. So is it any wonder the bankers have reverted and taken £7bn in bonuses this year? Because last year they received the much more frugal sum of £7bn, which may look the same but that doesn't take into account the higher remorse rate and the punitively high apology index. In this paper David Buik, a market analyst with BGC Partners, showed his analytical skills with a detailed economic response to the bonuses: "Life is not fair... Folks, get over it! Let's move on!" This is why we have to pay seemingly vast sums to people in the City, because you wouldn't get that level of fiscal genius from any idiot down the pub. So at last the bankers may win the human rights they deserve, as even the Prime Minister seems likely to back down. According to a Daily Telegraph headline yesterday, "Cameron admits defeat over bonuses for bankers". This shows how flexible Cameron can be, because he fought so hard to reduce those bonuses, asking the bankers as many as one time if they wouldn't mind reducing them although it didn't really matter, but when the bankers resisted through the wily tactic of taking no notice, he showed he was prepared to think again. But Nick Clegg is still as tough as ever, insisting if they want to swipe this much again that "the key issue is to be sensitive". So now the same attitudes will probably trickle down to the poor. The Government will scrap their plans for cutting housing benefit, and replace it with a voluntary scheme in which they ask claimants whether they fancy receiving less. And instead of student tuition fees there will be a "graduation loan scheme" in which students are asked to loan a sum of their choosing to the Government, unless they'd rather not. Then the head of the CBI will present a series of adverts about benefit fraud, in which he'll say: "This man claimed unemployment benefit for six months while he was driving a truck for his brother's removal firm. But when he didn't claim it one week he received not one jot of praise. Doesn't it make you sick?" Then a social security analyst will inform us that there are deep social reasons for some people remaining on benefits, which is "Life isn't fair, get over it", and Nick Clegg will insist that when someone's caught claiming £8m in disability benefit while they're training to compete as an Olympic triple jumper, the key issue is they should try and be a bit sensitive. http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/mark-steel/mark-steel-we-owe-it-to-bankers-to-feel-their-pain-2182016.html Banks given go-ahead to pay unlimited bonuses - David Guyatt - 13-01-2011 Magda Hassan Wrote:ob Diamond, chief executive of Barclays, who himself has to suffer the trauma of an £8m bonus, said yesterday that the bankers' "period of remorse and apology should be over". Excuse my french but... what a fookin' cheek Diamond has got. Two years of pubic hate aimed at bankers for their uncontrolled and relentless greed that has placed us all in debt bondage for probably the next 30 years or more, and he wants to get back to "business as usual". Well, they can't void their responsibility, and we shouldn't let him even try. If he succeeds, and we fail in this endeavour, we'll just suffer another revisitation of the same plundering vampires in a decade or so. Banks given go-ahead to pay unlimited bonuses - Peter Lemkin - 13-01-2011 £8m buys a lot of fish and chips.....!!! Maybe even enough to feed all the hungry on the Planet for a month or six! That guy belongs in the Tower of London's dungeon!!!! |