Wednesday, December 12, 2012

In Defense of the Wall Street Bonus




New York Magazine’s Kevin Roose writes:  It's nearly January, the time of every year when Wall Street banks pay their employees and executives their annual year-end bonuses and the rest of America freaks out about how outrageously big they are.  I've covered several bonus cycles now, including talking to the compensation consultants who help banks set their pay, and I've come to realize that no amount of justification or hand-wringing on the part of executives can put an average Wall Street bonus within the realm of normal-person acceptability. And I agree that Wall Street workers are, by and large, overpaid.

But I've also come around to the idea that if you have to overpay Wall Street workers, year-end bonuses might be a good mechanism for doing it. Big bonuses smooth out the cyclical ups and downs of banks and stabilize local labor markets, and they may even help the greater economy…..

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