Winnipeg Free Press - ONLINE EDITION
Tell-all banking crisis book says CEO looked out for No. 1
NEW YORK — Sheila Bair, former chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., one of the few heroes to emerge from the financial crisis, has written a marvellous new book, Bull by the Horns: Fighting to Save Main Street from Wall Street and Wall Street From Itself.
Bair was in the room when the major bailout decisions were made, and she was one of the few pushing for real accountability from Wall Street and real protection of homeowners.
In the book, and this week on my "Current" TV show, she told an amazing vignette.
The infamous TARP funds were being discussed with the CEOs of the major banks, and they were all called to Washington for the critical meeting with the Treasury secretary. The financial world was literally teetering on the brink of disaster, and the first question asked by John Thain, the CEO of Merrill Lynch, was not about how the system could be saved, the economy preserved, the integrity of the banks upheld.
No. He asked if his compensation was going to be cut. This is the guy who spent more than $1 million putting new carpets in his office, paid for by shareholders — and then by taxpayers.
In a radio interview this week, Bethany McLean, a great journalist, made a really important point: Flawed compensation structures that gave bankers perverse incentives to take great risk at the expense of others were at the root of the crisis. She pointed out that we as a society did not, and do not, object to high pay when people perform. It is when they are compensated with huge paychecks and bonuses even when they fail — and then are compensated again and again that way — that we are troubled.
We do not object to Derek Jeter’s big paycheck or even Warren Buffett’s. They earned them.
The Thain vignette is so troubling because he did such harm and yet continued to feel so entitled, to express no sense of remorse, to not recognize that his stewardship had led to the troubles and that maybe there should be consequences. He and others on Wall Street personified the world of heads I win, tails you lose — or, put another way, of socializing risk while privatizing gains.
Have we learned any lessons? The critical point is this: We don’t resent success, we applaud it. We don’t begrudge others the earned fruits of their labour. But we do and should resent an attitude of entitlement without obligation. And that attitude is still pervasive on Wall Street.
Eliot Spitzer, former governor of New York, hosts "Viewpoint" on Current TV
— Slate
More Analysis
- Back to Top
- Return to Analysis
Poll
Most Popular Analysis
- What is Struthers afraid of?
- Never take candy from a stranger
- Can't lose when ends justify means
- Cash for coitus scheme gets axed in Oz
- THIS IS NO WAY TO MAKE A POINT!!!
- 'Most hated man' in Senate
- Why we assume the worst
- Philippine election all about personality, not policy
- StatCan survey data worthless
- The Angelina Jolie effect
- The Angelina Jolie effect
- Angelina Jolie: 'I feel empowered... '
- A sad twist in the path that the corner store was on
- Making NRC tool of industry bad for science
- Ruining lives for cash flow
- What is Struthers afraid of?
- Internet becoming a jungle
- Harper fuels opposition to oilsands projects
- Cash for coitus scheme gets axed in Oz
- Smart people SLEEP LATE
- Don, it's not about nakedness
- Speeding fine only half of it
- Ashton might try to get the facts straight
- Ageism is rampant in Canada
- Canadian to expose alien collaboration with U.S.
- Smart people SLEEP LATE
- 'Done deal' offends Whiteshell cottagers
- What are they smoking at First Nations Bank?
- Celebrated economics theory wrong
- Manitoba could follow B.C. on surrogacy issue
- Ruining lives for cash flow
- Happy not-mother's days
- Internet becoming a jungle
- 3D printers will make outsourcing so yesterday
- Early childhood education overrated
- Canada and the Arctic Council
- Speeding fine only half of it
- Manitoba could follow B.C. on surrogacy issue
- Why Stephen Poloz heads the Bank of Canada
- Making NRC tool of industry bad for science
- 'Done deal' offends Whiteshell cottagers
- How CBC and others torque ratings
- Kim Sigurdson It's time for government fish monger to cut bait
- Speeding fine only half of it
- Ice roads, airships could work together
- Where is Canada's strategy to help Ukraine?
- Climate options -- grim, grimmer, grimmest
- Mother Nature springs into action
- Industry, First Nations partnerships exploding
- Ageism is rampant in Canada
Ads by Google












You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.