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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated

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To: KLP who wrote (297194)3/19/2009 8:52:27 PM
From: Elroy  Read Replies (3) of 793820
 
Again, IF a company takes money from the Government to try to ward off bankruptcy, then no bonuses should be given. The contracts are faulty if they don't include that clause. You don't receive commission unless you produce, so why should people get bonuses if a company is going to fail?

You're ignoring the point that I was trying to make. Many of these companies and their employees don't view these as bonuses in the way you're using the term. For many of these companies the "bonus" is a standard part of expected pay which the employee expects to receive EVERY year, regardless of corporate performance, but they call it a bonus.

For example I worked at Toyota in Japan back in the 1980s. Twice a year all regular employees received three months of bonus. It wasn't a "bonus" for Toyota doing well, it was just a non-uniform pay schedule.

I'm not saying the AIG or investment bank employees necessarily deserve their high pay, but part of the public backlash against "bonuses" is the public not correctly understanding the salary schedule for these companies. Even in bad years with no government help, their employees got "bonuses", they were just smaller than in good years.
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