Bankers’ Pay Locked Up: Why Not Lock Up Part of Coral Gables’ Management Salaries

Interesting.

Why not lock up (say) 20 percent of the city manager’s salary, the financial manager’s salary and any other relevant functionaries’ salaries that have to do with good management and budget administration in the city of Coral Gables.  Then release all or part of the salary the following years if work is satisfactory and the budget executed properly.

According to the Wall Street Journal, for 2008 there were nearly 5,000 bonus payments in excess of $1 million at “the largest US banks that accepted Treasury aid.”

Rather the push to constrain bank executive pay comes from officials and the political elite in continental Europe – supported by an increasingly effective pro-reform group around the Bank of England (led by Mervyn King, the governor).  There is also supportive language in the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, although this by itself rather vague and completely open to interpretation by the regulators.

Still, the overall proposal is entirely reasonable and well thought through at a general level: “lock-up” a considerable fraction of bank bonuses until we see, after several years, exactly how the banks do.

via Bankers’ Pay On The Line Again « The Baseline Scenario.

Defend Free Speech

This correctly defends the right of the press and others (including, websites like Wikileaks ) to circulate information of the government after it has been leaked by its own employees. At the very least the leaking of information by a low level functionary is a sign of serious government mismanagement and an overreaching of government’s unnecessary classification of information.

Otherwise, anyone utilizing this information might be subject to government prosecution.

It is the job of government to defend its own secrets.

…this proposed law may be constitutional as applied to government employees who unlawfully leak such material to people who are unauthorized to receive it, it would plainly violate the First Amendment to punish anyone who might publish or otherwise circulate the information after it has been leaked. At the very least, the act must be expressly limited to situations in which the spread of the classified information poses a clear and imminent danger of grave harm to the nation.

via A Clear and Present Danger to Free Speech – NYTimes.com.

New Florida Congressman Should Resign

Does Mr. David Rivera believe that returning unreported and unethically procured  monies, that that simply ends the story.  This is a matter of sound public ethics and morality.

He should resign.

In a statement Monday accompanying Rivera’s latest disclosures, spokeswoman Sarah Bascom said: “It is our hope that this will put an end to the unfounded allegations that were raised during the recent election campaign” against Rivera, his supporters and family.

via New Fla. congressman quietly reported loans in Dec.

Convergence by China and India

It is truly amazing how fast China and India are catching up with the rest of the world and how powerful the absolute size of China and India will be (maybe adding Brazil) relative to the rest of the world.  It is worth reading this interesting article in FT on this subject.

Suppose China were to follow Japan’s path during the 1950s and 1960s. Then it would still have 20 years of very fast growth in front of it, reaching some 70 per cent of US output per head by 2030. At that point, its economy would be a little less than three times as large as that of the US…and larger than that of the US and western Europe combined. India is further behind. At recent rates of growth, India’s economy would be about 80 per cent of that of the US by 2030, though its gross domestic product per head would still be less than a fifth of US levels.

China is today where Japan was in 1950, relative to US levels at that time. But its output per head is far higher in absolute terms, since US levels have themselves risen threefold. Today, China’s real GDP per head is roughly where Japan’s was in the mid-1960s and South Korea’s in the mid-1980s. India’s are where Japan was in the early 1950s and South Korea in the early 1970s.

via FT.com / Comment / Op-Ed Columnists – In the grip of a great convergence.