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Obama Govt will still pay PAP's top salaries

ejected.president

Alfrescian
Loyal
Obama administration made LKY's day again! Fuck Spider Obama!


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090610...jb3JkaW9uX3BvbGl0aWNzBHNsawNnZWl0aG5lcm5vY2E-



Clash of the GOP Titans:It's Palin vs. Gingrich at Republican fundraiser
Administration jawbones corporate boards on pay



By JIM KUHNHENN, Associated Press Writer Jim Kuhnhenn, Associated Press Writer – 4 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration, which partly blamed out-of-whack executive pay for the nation's financial crisis, says it won't try to directly limit such pay, choosing instead on Wednesday to try to tame compensation through shareholder pressure.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said the administration will ask Congress to give shareholders a nonbinding voice on executive pay and to require corporate compensation committees to be independent from company management. That second provision would give the Securities and Exchange Commission authority to strengthen the independence of panels that set executive pay.

Separately, the administration is preparing to issue new, more specific regulations governing pay at financial institutions that have received infusions from the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. Those regulations, following legislation already passed by Congress, would limit top executives at these companies to bonuses no greater than one-third of their annual salaries.

An official said the administration will appoint a "special master" to oversee compensation at firms receiving large amounts of government assistance. The pay overseer would have the power to reject excessively generous pay plans.

The issue of executive pay has raised a strong populist cry, especially after the economy began stumbling in 2007 and stocks were falling. Lawmakers have remained attuned to it, particularly after American International Group in March announced bonuses totaling more than $165 million.

As for the goal of the legislative efforts announced Wednesday, Geithner said that "we'd like to see better transparency and accountability, frankly" of executive pay practices.

He said the efforts would reinforce administration compensation guidelines, released Wednesday, that encourage corporate boards to adopt pay packages that reward long-term performance rather than short-term gains and to better manage the relationship between risk and incentive. Those guidelines, or principles, are not enforceable but are meant as a message to corporate boards and to shareholders.

"We are not proposing an ongoing government role in setting policy in compensation," Geithner said. "We do not believe it's appropriate for the government to set caps in compensation. We're not going to prescribe detailed prescriptive rules for compensation. All those things would be ineffective, could be counterproductive in some ways."

Regarding the regulations that are still to come, an administration official said the special master will review compensation for the top 100 salaried employees at firms that receive exceptional assistance under TARP. Among the companies that could be affected would be Bank of America, General Motors Corp. and the American International Group.

The special master is expected to be Kenneth Feinberg, a lawyer who oversaw payments to families of victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Feinberg attended Wednesday's compensation meeting with Geithner. Also there were Securities and Exchange Commission chair Mary Schapiro and Federal Reserve Governor Dan Tarullo.

The administration is to release the TARP-related regulations this week that stem from legislation Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., inserted as an amendment to the economic stimulus package earlier this year. Besides the provision limiting bonuses, it would require the treasury secretary to seek reimbursement of any compensation paid to a TARP recipient's top 25 employees if Treasury deemed the payments contrary to the public interest.

On Thursday, officials from the Treasury Department, Federal Reserve and Securities and Exchange Commission are expected to testify about executive compensation before the House Financial Services Committee.

Committee Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., said the goal is to ensure salaries and bonuses don't encourage industry executives to take big risks.

"We have a heads I win, tails I break even compensation system in the financial services industry in America," said Frank. "Executives have a perverse incentive to expose their companies to more and more risk, but only the shareholders realize the downside of bad bets."

So-called shareholder "say on pay" legislation cleared the House in April 2007 by a 2-to-1 margin but went nowhere in the Senate. It was opposed by the Bush White House and most Republicans.

Investor advocates, union pension funds and shareholder groups have pushed for the legislation.

As a senator in 2007, President Barack Obama introduced a bill to require companies to allow nonbinding shareholder votes on executive compensation packages, though his proposal wouldn't have limited CEO pay.

During the presidential campaign, Hillary Rodham Clinton also proposed a measure to give shareholders a nonbinding vote on executives' pay packages. In addition, her bill would have required top executives who collect large performance-based pay packages to return the money if financial irregularities are discovered and companies are forced to restate their earnings. It also would have capped the amount that top executives could earn tax-free through deferred compensation.

Obama and his economic team have been trying to temper the populist urge to cap salaries while at the same time make the case that compensation practices contributed to the current crisis by encouraging high risk taking.

Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., encouraged Geithner to act. "We've got to change corporate culture that says the leadership at the top can often take its compensation without regard for what happens with the employees or the future investing or the well-being of the company and taxpayers," he said.

___

AP Economics Writers Martin Crutsinger and Marcy Gordon contributed to this report.
 

illLEEgal

Alfrescian
Loyal
Can not! It will be ill-LEE-gal!

The crasy Treasury Secretary can say one thing there, and other officials will say the exact contrary. Obama govt is giving self-conflicting signals to the public!

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/18/20090610/tbs-obama-proposes-law-to-curb-corporate-8cc5291.html

Obama proposes law to curb corporate bonuses

58 mins ago
AFP

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US President Barack Obama's administration unveiled plans Wednesday for legislation to give authorities and shareholders the means to limit bonus payments to executives of listed firms. Skip related content
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US Securities and Exchange Commission Chairwoman Mary Schapiro Enlarge photo

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Have your say: Financial Crisis

The proposed bill could give the government new authority to become involved in compensation packages for top corporate leaders, but would not be used to set salary levels, as some had feared, except for firms getting bailouts.

A new pay czar, to be known as a "special master," would also be appointed with powers to reject salary plans from firms getting taxpayer help to ward off the financial crisis if they were deemed "excessive or inappropriate, an administration official said.

The moves followed a public outcry earlier this year after big companies, which had received huge public bailouts, made large bonus payments to top executives amid the worst financial crisis in decades.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in a statement that a process had begun to bring compensation practices "more tightly in line with the interests of shareholders and reinforcing the stability of firms and the financial system."

He said the administration would work with Congress to pass legislation giving the Securities Commission powers to require firms to give shareholders a "non-binding" vote on compensation packages.

It would also propose legislation giving the SEC powers to ensure that committees deciding on compensation in companies were "more independent, adhering to standards similar to those in place for audit committees."

At the same time, Geithner said, compensation committees would be given the responsibility and the resources to hire their own independent compensation consultants and outside counsel.

Geithner stressed the authorities were not putting limits on salaries but wanted to develop a benchmark rewarding innovation and what he called "prudent risk taking."

"I want to be clear on what we are not doing. We are not capping pay," Geithner said after a meeting with SEC chief Mary Schapiro, Federal Reserve Governor Dan Tarullo and top experts in a bid to "better align compensation practices -- particularly in the financial sector -- with sound risk management and long-term growth."

"We are not setting forth precise prescriptions for how companies should set compensation, which can often be counterproductive.

"Instead, we will continue to work to develop standards that reward innovation and prudent risk-taking, without creating misaligned incentives."

In February, the administration reacted angrily to massive bonus payments for some executives by saying senior officers of firms getting taxpayer bailouts would have total annual compensation capped at 500,000 dollars.

"This financial crisis had many significant causes, but executive compensation practices were a contributing factor," Geithner said.

A White House working group on financial markets would provide an annual review of compensation practices to monitor whether they were creating excessive risks, he said.

"And we will encourage experts in the field -- academics, business leaders and shareholders -- to conduct their own reviews to identify best practices, emerging positive and negative trends and call attention to risks that might otherwise go unseen," he said.
 
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