Our Mission at AIG: Repairs, and Repayment
Edward Liddy, head of AIG:
In all, total 2008 compensation for the top 47 executives is 56 percent lower than their total 2007 compensation.
Driving the company into the ground only gets you a 44% pay cut. Nice.
From the NYT:
Mr. Cuomo did not name the bonus recipients, but the numbers are eye-popping, given A.I.G.’s fragile state. The highest bonus was $6.4 million, and six other employees received more than $4 million, according to Mr. Cuomo. Fifteen other people received bonuses of more than $2 million, and 51 people received bonuses of $1 million to $2 million, Mr. Cuomo said. Eleven of those who received “retention” bonuses of $1 million or more are no longer working at A.I.G., including one who received $4.6 million, he said.
See also: Idlewords on Andrew Ross Sorkin’s twisted logic:
When a small company does what AIG did, it is called ‘fraud’ and people are sent to jail. However, since AIG had signed contracts with most of the biggest financial institutions in the world, it instead received a very large sum of money ($170 billion so far). This also makes sense. When a teenage kid breaks your storefront window, you chase him down and give him a pounding. But when the local mafia breaks your window, you sweep up the glass and make sure to increase the heft of your next monthly envelope.
(thx paul)