I'm sure you've heard about the White House's plan to clamp down on what banks pay their executives. Generally speaking, I'm against the government telling private industry what they can and cannot pay people, but I am really torn on this. I guess I put things into a few different categories.
-As to companies that are privately held and have never asked for or received a government bailout, the gov't has no place to interfere.
-As to companies that have received a bailout and have not yet paid it all back, I'm generally OK with some reasonable level of oversight into compensation, in the interests of ensuring that our investment will be paid back.
-As to companies that we bailed out and they have paid everything back, with interest, I'm seriously torn. I'd ordinarily be against it, but when I see them engaging in the same behavior that got them -- and accordingly, us -- into this mess to begin with, it makes me pretty uncomfortable. We cannot get into a cycle where companies that are "too big to fail" make a ton of cash and distribute it to a handful of highly paid execs rather than capitalizing/stablizing the company, then get into trouble and the rest of us bear the brunt of that short-sightedness by bailing them out -- again. Privatizing the profits and socializing the losses is a pretty bitter pill to swallow, IMO, and that just can't be the way we do things around here.
Thoughts?
-As to companies that are privately held and have never asked for or received a government bailout, the gov't has no place to interfere.
-As to companies that have received a bailout and have not yet paid it all back, I'm generally OK with some reasonable level of oversight into compensation, in the interests of ensuring that our investment will be paid back.
-As to companies that we bailed out and they have paid everything back, with interest, I'm seriously torn. I'd ordinarily be against it, but when I see them engaging in the same behavior that got them -- and accordingly, us -- into this mess to begin with, it makes me pretty uncomfortable. We cannot get into a cycle where companies that are "too big to fail" make a ton of cash and distribute it to a handful of highly paid execs rather than capitalizing/stablizing the company, then get into trouble and the rest of us bear the brunt of that short-sightedness by bailing them out -- again. Privatizing the profits and socializing the losses is a pretty bitter pill to swallow, IMO, and that just can't be the way we do things around here.
Thoughts?
Comment