well silence as expected.
so, how about this. do you think obama will waffle on this just like he did the AIG bonuses?
so, how about this. do you think obama will waffle on this just like he did the AIG bonuses?
destruktion_6143 wrote:
hmm, interesting. are these bonuses for the CEO's or for the grunts of the company?
Glad the number in dollars is dropping though.The retention awards for more than 7,600 employees were disclosed in a letter from the companies' regulator released Friday by Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, the senior Republican on the Senate Finance Committee. The companies paid out nearly $51 million last year, are scheduled to make $146 million in payments this year and $13 million in 2010.
Last edited by AussieReaper (2009-04-03 23:05:37)
so this isnt like AIG paying bonuses to the few CEO's that ran the company into the ground?AussieReaper wrote:
destruktion_6143 wrote:
hmm, interesting. are these bonuses for the CEO's or for the grunts of the company?Glad the number in dollars is dropping though.The retention awards for more than 7,600 employees were disclosed in a letter from the companies' regulator released Friday by Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, the senior Republican on the Senate Finance Committee. The companies paid out nearly $51 million last year, are scheduled to make $146 million in payments this year and $13 million in 2010.
Well, no. Butdestruktion_6143 wrote:
so this isnt like AIG paying bonuses to the few CEO's that ran the company into the ground?
At least four are getting at least $1 million. It isn't a huge number, but the key words here are "at least."Fannie and Freddie declined to comment on Friday. Fannie had disclosed that it plans to pay four top executives at least $1 million each in retention payments that run through February. Freddie has yet to report on which executives are in line for the awards.
But at the same time I really doubt anyone would quit their job during a recession with the jobless ques mounting as they are. And the logic of keeping a winning formula also doesn't work.Mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac plan to pay more than $210 million in bonuses through next year to give workers the incentive to stay in their jobs at the government-controlled companies.
Last edited by AussieReaper (2009-04-03 23:14:47)
i believe it wasnt them, wasnt the private sector accountable for over 70% of this mess?usmarine wrote:
the main point is they started this whole mess, now they get bonuses. whether it be 1 dollar or 1 million it is still bullshit. whether its a grunt or CEO. if it wasnt for the taxpayer, they wouldnt even have a job right now. change we can believe in.