The One Percent Isn’t Happy
Gabriel Sherman wrote an article last week detailing how Wall Street is so upset at the Obama Administration for financial reform resulting lower bonuses. Matt Taibbi decimates Sherman’s article, first by pointing out that uncertainty in Europe is far more to blame than financial regulation for lower bonuses and then arguing that even if the government was responsible, who cares?
The financial services industry went from having a 19 percent share of America’s corporate profits decades ago to having a 41 percent share in recent years. That doesn’t mean bankers ever represented anywhere near 41 percent of America’s labor value. It just means they’ve managed to make themselves horrifically overpaid relative to their counterparts in the rest of the economy.
A banker’s job is to be a prudent and dependable steward of other peoples’ money – being worthy of our trust in that area is the entire justification for their traditionally high compensation.
Yet these people have failed so spectacularly at that job in the last fifteen years that they’re lucky that God himself didn’t come down to earth at bonus time this year, angrily boot their asses out of those new condos, and command those Zagat-reading girlfriends of theirs to start getting acquainted with the McDonalds value meal lineup. They should be glad they’re still getting anything at all, not whining to New York magazine.
Copyright 2012 Liberaland
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