March 20, 2009

Paper Pitchforks

Class warfare is traditionally a top down affair. The recent outrage over the AIG bonuses has been pretty amusing - millionaire congresscritters bleating about how awful it is that masters of the universe at AIG's financial products division want to pay themselves fat gobs of cash after wrecking the world economy. Left out of their faux-populism is the fact they are complicit in the looting that has been conducted by the wealthy in our country for thirty years, and which was virulently accelerated in the 1990s.

And as much as I take perverse pleasure in watching CEOs squirm a bit, this "tax the bonuses back" is just stupid policy. Paul Krugman is on the case:

I’ll leave to others the question of who knew or should have known that the bonus firestorm was coming; but it’s part of a pattern. At every stage, Geithner et al have made it clear that they still have faith in the people who created the financial crisis — that they believe that all we have is a liquidity crisis that can be undone with a bit of financial engineering, that “governments do a bad job of running banks” (as opposed, presumably, to the wonderful job the private bankers have done), that financial bailouts and guarantees should come with no strings attached.

No comments: