Sat, Oct 04, 2008 - Page 9 News List

Uproar over excessive executive pay intensifying in Britain

By Landon Thomas  /  NY TIMES NEWS SERVICE , LONDON

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King gave a speech last spring denouncing the hubris of bankers. That same day, the British bank Barclays disclosed a bonus of £21 million, or about US$38 million, to its president Robert Diamond for last year, despite a £1.6 billion write-down for the year.

King followed up his criticism of the excesses of the City of London, as the financial district is known, by choosing not to accept an increase in his salary of £290,000.

By comparison, the outsize personality and bonuses of Diamond, the US-born chief of Barclay’s investment banking business, have made him a visible symbol of a Wall Street ethos that has taken root in the financial district.

Such contrasts have fueled a growing uproar — led by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and joined by union leaders and theologians — over how best to curb a culture of escalating pay packages that some believe pushed bankers to take excessive risks.

On Monday, the government’s announcement of the nationalization of the mortgage lender Bradford & Bingley and an industry estimate that 12,000 finance jobs would be lost in the coming months only added to an angry reaction against the City’s financiers and a sense that they have led the country astray.

Dissatisfaction over high pay, business failures and US-style laissez-faire capitalism has been sweeping across Europe for some time, but it has been given new impetus as investors and politicians struggle to make sense of a credit vise that tightens by the day.

Even before the latest tumult, steps were taken in the Netherlands and France to limit excessive compensation, and the issue is back on the agenda when European finance ministers meet next Monday in Luxembourg.

In the US, outrage among many voters over the prospect of bailing out Wall Street executives played a role in the surprising rejection on Monday of a US$700 billion financial rescue plan in the House of Representatives.

But the vitriol has been particularly bitter in Britain, which, before the arrival of Margaret Thatcher as prime minister in 1979, was led by Labour and Conservative governments that sought to rein in capitalism rather than unleash it.

It seems touched as well by a sense of schadenfreude as bankers who once lived so high are being brought low.

“It is in our psyche — we always knock success,” said Vic Daniels, a former banker who runs a Web site, hereisthecity.com, that tracks the foibles, appetites and bonuses of London’s financial elite. “Who are the most hated football teams? Manchester United and Chelsea. Why? Because they are the most successful. The Brits just don’t like the in-your-face winners.”

At his party conference on Sunday, Conservative Party leader David Cameron noted the public mood by expressing support for a closer examination of how bankers are paid. But mindful of the party’s base, Cameron also warned against excessive bashing.

As it is, the pay of top bankers in Britain and across the continent does not approach that of chief executives in the US. Fred Goodwin, chief executive of Royal Bank of Scotland, was paid £4 million for last year. By comparison, Richard Fuld, chief executive of Lehman Brothers, was paid more than US$40 million last year just months before his company collapsed.

Now Diamond, who took a pay cut last year and is leading Barclay’s purchase of some of the best parts of Lehman, is preparing to open an office in Lehman’s former headquarters in New York.

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