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Report: AIG asks gov't to approve bonus payments

Thu Jul 9, 2009 11:44 PM EDT
business, aig, bonuses, american-international-group
The Associated Press, HOPD
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— After its bonus payments ignited a firestorm of criticism earlier this year, American International Group Inc. is asking the federal government to weigh in on the insurer's plan to resume paying millions in promised retention incentives next week, according to media reports.

AIG, once the world's largest insurer, has asked the Obama administration's compensation czar, Kenneth R. Feinberg, to approve the payments in order to head off any public outrage, The Washington Post reported Thursday evening.

While the company isn't required to get the government's blessing because the payments are actually for 2008 employment contracts, the newspaper said executives are reluctant to move forward with installments coming due next week without official approval.

Feinberg has the power to reject pay plans he deems excessive at companies which benefited from large infusions from the government's $700 billion bank bailout fund. Feinberg also has authority to review compensation for the top 100 salaried employees at those firms. AIG is among the companies whose pay practices the government now oversees.

New York-based AIG remains the focus of intense scrutiny, after becoming one in a string of corporate calamities and a touchstone for public fury. The huge volume of credit default swaps — a form of insurance against bond defaults — sold by AIG, coupled with rising levels of defaulted mortgage and other debt, threatened the company's existence and prompted the government to step in.

Government aid to AIG totals about $180 billion.

The $450 million in bonuses that AIG allocated in 2008 for employees, including to traders in the financial products unit that brought it to the brink of collapse, fueled public and congressional outrage. The first installment of those payments earlier this year sparked legislation in Congress to slap punishing taxes on big bonuses at AIG and other companies bailed out by taxpayers, though the Senate didn't act on that plan.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (2)
ronkaroo

AIG needs to see what "Free Enterprise" is really all about. Take back the billions of dollars the government used to bail them out and let them go "belly up." Let the execs see what it's like to be unemployed like the other 9.7 percent of Americans who didn't make the kind of salaries they receive.

I know lots of people who were supposed to receive "pay raises" and the companies closed because the government didn't come to their aid. I know people who gave up days of work so others didn't get laid off the job.

So how about those AIG executives find an ounce - make it a pound - of ethical sense and donate those bonuses to the foodbanks or other services that are helping the unemployed? Let's put the sense of Christ back into Christianity.

    Reply#1 - Fri Jul 10, 2009 12:19 AM EDT
    banshee8989

    What bothers me is the fact that these so called "to good to loose" people don't care about public perception. Obviously they have to know that getting a bonus right now is a bad idea. Seems to me if your the top brass at a business you should care about what the public thinks of you.

    No bonus this year...... if you don't like it... to bad and don't let the door hit you in the ass on the way out. There are plenty of young uncorrupted coming out of college right now that would do a far better job.

      Reply#2 - Fri Jul 10, 2009 3:54 PM EDT
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