Saturday, December 11, 2010

The consequences of class warfare

GM Seeks Pay Leeway From Treasury

GM CEO Dan Akerson may believe that

There’s more to life than money,

but he tells the Freep that GM is running the risk of losing top managers to the competition, and must seek more flexibility on pay rules from the Treasury. Akerson wouldn’t clarify what kind of concessions he’s asking for from Treasury, but says that the risk of losing employees in the short term is very real. Meanwhile, even though the government isn’t the majority stakeholder in GM any longer, it will have to OK executive compensation packages until the bailout is paid back. Which prompts The Atlantic‘s Daniel Indiviglio to suggest

there may also be ways to structure pay to minimize cash in compensation packages. For example, if a large portion of compensation is awarded in GM stock that does not vest until the company has paid back the bailout, then this would provide additional incentive to these executives and limit their immediate cash compensation. Unfortunately, there’s no perfect solution to this problem, because the government shouldn’t be involved in the business of bailouts in the first place.

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