The Brits are doing this so much better than the clowns at the Fed:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/dec/18/executive-pay-bonuses-bankofenglandgovernor
-----------------------------------------------snip
Andy Haldane, the bank's head of financial stability, also said that
banks had become too big and was sharply critical of a culture where
bankers could take huge risks in the knowledge that the taxpayer would
bail them out.

In an interview with the BBC World Service, Haldane said: "Some of the
downsides of carrying around a big financial system are now evident to
all.

"If some of that were to migrate overseas that would be unfortunate
but given the costs of carrying that financial system around, it may
be a price worth paying."

His comments underlined the gulf between Threadneedle Street and the
City over how to deal with the fallout from the financial crisis.

The Bank's financial stability report, published today, stepped into
the row over bonuses by calling for banks to build up their capital
rather than making large payments to staff as many are expected to do
despite the sector being bailed out by the taxpayer.

Earlier this year the bank's governor, Mervyn King, suggested that the
largest banks should be split in two in order to separate the retail
part from the high risk investment bank divisions.

Haldane said that the effort to reform the City should not be delayed.

"It's true that the lobbying effort of the financial sector should not
be under-estimated. Equally, the way to beat that back is by appealing
to logic and to evidence.

Disputing the argument used by bankers that they need to be big to
compete globally, he said: "There is not so much as a scintilla of
evidence of bigger being better in banking is the truth of it. A lot
of the noise around that really is rhetoric.

"So in most industries we do think that bigger and wider delivers a
better product for the end user. I think in banking the evidence on
that is close to non-existent.

"And we do know at the same time that bigger certainly isn't better
when the going gets tough. Bigger during this crisis has meant bigger
bailouts not better bailouts."

Haldane also spoke about what he described as a "doom loop" where
banks take risks knowing that the state would bail out the sector
because it was too important to be allowed to fail.

"It's a loop we've been round repeatedly over the last 200 years which
is that every time we have one of these events, the public sector has
ridden to the rescue, it has written the cheque.

"And that has rather fortified the financial sector to double their
bets for next time which means that when next time comes the cheque
needs to be that much bigger … It will be a long-run battle."

The announcement last week of the bonus supertax has prompted a fierce
debate with dire predictions from the industry that staff will
relocate overseas rather than be forced to pay more tax. City critics
say it will damage London's reputation as a centre for international
finance and also hit the public purse by discouraging new business to
set up here.



-raghu.




-- 
Have you ever noticed? Anybody driving slower than you is an idiot,
and anyone driving faster is a maniac?"
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