MrPopo wrote:
I understand your sentiment here, but how about this counter example. The economy is doing great, joblessness is at an all time low, then by dumb luck you end up getting into a terrible car accident and are no longer a viable member of the workforce. Again, if you're rich you probably can support yourself and the care you require, while anyone who isn't rich (it's not even poor in this case) is doomed. I see us as having two options; the first is that the state subsidizes you and ensures you can live until you die (or be made a viable worker again). The other option is to let you fail.
And? What's the counter example here?
This point really irks me, because they weren't rewarded for failure. They didn't get a bonus for fucking up the market.
Being rewarded despite failure is not materially different than being rewarded for failure. In either case the incentives are completely fucked up.
Golden parachutes are a compensation for no longer making annual CEO money.
And if you fuck up as bad as many of these CEOs have, you don't deserve CEO money, you deserve jail.
They're in place long before any of these problems
Yes, and they were almost certainly part of the cause of the problem. If a CEO knows that whatever happens he's going to walk away with a huge pile of cash, what incentive does he have to do a good job?
Saying they were rewarded for failure implies that the board got together and said "Man, this guy totally fucked up things. Let's give him money to reward him!"
If you remember, these companies fought hard to be able to pay out these bonuses. With cries of "we can't retain top talent without top compensation", under the inexplicable assumption that the people who drove the country into the ground are somehow "top talent" and deserved to be retained instead of jailed.
Or they'd say "Contract law! We're bound by law to pay out these bonuses". And then a few short weeks later "we have to renegotiate contracts with labor to stay solvent!". Bullshit. Fucking bullshit.