Banks have recently been acknowledging enormous losses, yet those losses are barely reflected in employee compensation. For example, Morgan Stanley announced a $9.4bn charge-off in the fourth quarter and at the same time increased its bonus pool by 18 per cent. The justification was that many employees had a banner year and their compensation should not be held hostage to mistakes that were made in the subprime market. The chief executive, John Mack, however, assumed some responsibility and agreed to take no bonus for 2007 – although he got a $40m payout for 2006.
Are bank bonuses flawed?
Raghuram Rajan says bogus ”alpha” is created by hiding long-tail risks, as with structured products linked to subprime mortgages. A solution would be to hold in escrow a big chunk of bonuses until the full risks play out, meaning only true alpha gets jumbo rewards and reducing the hidden risks in the financial system. Is Rajan right? What solution would you propose?
Even so, most readers would suspect something is not right here. Indeed, compensation practices in the financial sector are deeply flawed and probably contributed to the ongoing crisis.

COMMENT 

