SLATE / Moneybox

Dominique Strauss-Kahn's Lavish Life
How does a socialist public servant pay for $3,000-a-night hotel
suites and first-class flights?

By Annie Lowrey
Posted Monday, May 16, 2011, at 3:42 PM ET

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the managing director of the International
Monetary Fund, allegedly sexually assaulted a maid in a $3,000-a-night
Midtown Manhattan hotel suite this weekend. Then, police arrested him
in the first-class cabin of a Paris-bound flight. How can a socialist
public servant afford such a luxurious life?

DSK, as he is widely known, earned a modest salary by international
banker standards, but his job came with an ample expense account. He
earns about $420,000 a year in salary, plus pension contributions and
generous benefits. On top of that, he receives about $75,000 "to
enable [him] to maintain, in the interests of the Fund, a scale of
living appropriate to [his] position"—essentially, money for a
Washington, D.C., home fancy enough to entertain foreign dignitaries
and the world's economic leaders.

But that's not all. Strauss-Kahn also had carte blanche to charge the
fund for all "reasonable expenses" incurred entertaining and meeting
with politicians and policymakers. And he received generous travel
funds, including a per diem and a dispensation for "all hotel
expenses." As per his contract, he always flies first class: "Your
travel on official Fund business…shall be in first class." (Notably,
the IMF says he was not on official business during his trip to New
York, therefore he had to foot the bill for the hotel and flight
himself.)

According to the New York Post, Strauss-Kahn had a special arrangement
where he could fly first-class on any Air France flight, at any time.
It is not clear who would have paid for those flights or whether the
details of the arrangement are even true. It seems unlikely that Air
France would have gifted the flights to DSK, as he is contractually
barred from accepting most presents worth more than $100. (A
first-class ticket from New York to Paris runs about $10,000.)

DSK's compensation and expenses are in line with his peers, the small
handful of central bankers and finance ministers at the helm of the
global economy. The president of the World Bank, for instance, makes
almost exactly same amount. As per the bank's most recent annual
report, Director Robert Zoellick earns $441,980 in salary, plus
$79,120 for living expenses.

Nevertheless, DSK's finances became a major issue in his home country
of France even before his arrest. This spring, he faced accusations of
being a "champagne socialist" after a photograph of him climbing into
a $100,000 Porsche got play in the papers. (The car was not his.) And
France Soir published a viral hit-job-slash-investigation, reporting
he wears suits made by Barack Obama's tailor that cost up to $35,000.
(DSK denies the allegation.)

The press also revealed that Strauss-Kahn and his wife, Anne Sinclair,
a prominent television personality, wealthy in her own right, travel
between a $4 million home in Georgetown, two multimillion-dollar
apartments in Paris, and a holiday riad in Marrakech. "It tends to
prove that the IMF's managing director…has, to some extent [?!?], lost
contact with 'real life,' " France Soir wrote, "By blindness, by
remoteness, by intoxication?"

The broader charge that IMF and World Bank executives live too well on
generous expense accounts while aiding—and sometimes imposing
austerity on—some of the world's poorest and most distressed economies
are not new. Last year, for instance, the two institutions came under
fire for giving employees generous pay raises. "We greatly value the
hard work and expertise of bank staff," a spokesmanfor Britain's
Department for International Development told the Washington Post. But
"when governments worldwide are cutting public spending, increasing
taxes, and reducing or freezing public-sector pay, to award an
above-inflation pay rise risks making the bank appear out of touch."

-- 
Jim Devine / "Patriotism is the conviction that your country is
superior to all others because you were born in it." -- George Bernard
Shaw
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