End Bonuses for Bankers
By NASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB
Published: November 7, 2011
I HAVE a solution for the problem of bankers who take risks
that threaten the general public: Eliminate bonuses.
I have a solution for
the problem of declining newspaper circulation: stop publishing this sort of tripe.
More than three years since the global financial crisis
started, financial institutions are still blowing themselves up.
Bankruptcies are part
of the rejuvenation intrinsic to the business cycle. This is particularly true
in an environment of prolonged recession that has been characterized by central
planners’ attempts to divorce cause from effect.
The latest, MF Global, filed for bankruptcy protection last
week after its chief executive, Jon S. Corzine, made risky investments in
European bonds. So far, lenders and shareholders have been paying the price,
not taxpayers.
Lo and behold, the
market is working as it should. It’s also worth noting that Corzine is a
Democrat, and also probably guilty of fraud.
But it is only a matter of time before private risk-taking
leads to another giant bailout like the ones the United States was forced to provide
in 2008.
The United States
was forced to provide a bailout in
2008? If memory serves, the government was the one forcing the banks to take a
bailout because an unpopular sitting duck president and a Congress in the
throes of a political dust-up decided that the risks of inaction were a greater
threat to their legacy than the risk of failed policy.
The promise of “no more bailouts,” enshrined in last year’s
Wall Street reform law, is just that — a promise.
While I believe that
a promise from a politician to a constituent ranks somewhere below “iron-clad,”
the solution is to make bailouts and crony capitalism so politically poisonous
that no politician could do it and retain their job. By blaming banks for the
bailout—indeed by claiming that the banks forced government’s hand—you have
absolved all responsibility from our public officials. Congratulations, Taleb.
In a mere paragraph you have a) shown historical illiteracy of events that
happened a mere three years ago, b) misdiagnosed the problem, c) blamed the
wrong people for the problem, and d) given poorly thought-out cover to those
who are actually responsible. Is “quadfecta” a word?
The financiers (and their lawyers)
We hate financiers
enough without bringing lawyers into it. Let’s not incite another OWS riot, big
guy.
will always stay one step ahead of the regulators.
Despite acknowledging
that there will always be a way around regulations, he proposes more
regulations. Fucking brilliant.
No one really knows what will happen the next time a giant bank
goes bust because of its misunderstanding of risk.
We do indeed live in
an uncertain world. Trying to protect from the infinite possibilities of
existence will have you shadowboxing in no time (this is Mr. Taleb’s
fundamental misunderstanding of the difference between uncertainty and risk). The
public policy question is much simpler: what should happen? The answer is simpler, too. The firm should enter
bankruptcy court and liquidate assets where necessary to emerge as a fiscally
solvent entity.
Instead, it’s time for a fundamental reform: Any person who
works for a company that, regardless of its current financial health, would
require a taxpayer-financed bailout if it failed,
I could make a very
good argument that this either applies to either no companies or to all
companies. This standard is purely asinine.
should not get a bonus, ever.
In this instance,
compensation will either occur in other, less transparent ways, or talent will
flee these industries. Get ready for a world where your bank’s employees are
all compensated like the IRS.
In fact, all pay at systemically important financial
institutions — big banks, but also some insurance companies and even huge hedge
funds — should be strictly regulated.
Why is it that
despite the demonstrable financial inefficiency of literally every governmental
agency ever created (military included) that Mr. Taleb’s particular class of
morons still insist on turning our most profitable and functional industries
into extensions of the government bloat?
Critics like the Occupy
Wall Street demonstrators decry the bonus system
for its lack of fairness
Which is, on it’s
face, laughable. Wall Street bonuses are the purest form of fairness still in
existence in America .
The better you perform—as judged by the stone-cold metric of profit—the more
you make. Period.
and its contribution to widening inequality.
Stop pretending like
the OWS protesters are people with policy goals; they’re a mob of malcontents
with the corresponding propensity towards violence and incoherent rationalizations.
But the greater problem is that it provides an incentive to
take risks.
Bonuses do not
provide an incentive to take risks. All risks have downside. That feature is
encapsulated nicely in the definition of risk. Performance-based compensation
provides an incentive to succeed. While greater risk carries a greater chance
of huge returns, it also carries a greater chance of poor performance reviews,
socially stigmatizing derision, and sleeping in a cardboard box.
The asymmetric nature of the bonus (an incentive for success
without a corresponding disincentive for failure)
The disincentive is a
lack of pay, lack of status, and eventual termination, you colossal jackass. The
bonus is the carrot. The stick comes from the boss when he realizes that your
portfolio has performed 53 basis points under market averages over the last
three years and boots your ass while trying to stifle a giggle as you plead through
your job through gasping sobs.
Wow. That got dark.
causes hidden risks to accumulate in the financial system
and become a catalyst for disaster.
Counter-party risk in
derivative contracts were indeed undervalued in the models that led up to the
2008 crash. I fail to see how the modeling shortcomings of a few analysts
somehow subordinates the entire financial sector to the federal government or
invites nationalization.
This violates the fundamental rules of capitalism;
The bailouts violate
the fundamental rules of capitalism.
Nationalizing the
banks violates the fundamental rules of capitalism.
Regulating employee
compensation violates the fundamental rules of capitalism.
Compensating
employees based on performance-based metrics does not—in any conceivable form—violate
the fundamental rules of capitalsm.
Adam Smith himself was wary of the effect of limiting
liability, a bedrock principle of the modern corporation.
If you want to eliminate
bankruptcy proceedings and reinstate debtors prisons, and low usury interest
rate ceilings, you’re welcome to present an argument, but for most of us, those
issues were settled even before the issue of American slavery.
Bonuses are particularly dangerous because they invite
bankers to game the system by hiding the risks of rare and hard-to-predict but
consequential blow-ups,
You speak, of course,
about the agency problem as it pertains to risk. This is a relevant and sober
topic that corporations have worked to minimize for decades. Yet you believe
that the solution is to compensate the men with their hands on the switches of
the global economy like a DC paper-pusher. Not only does this asinine “solution”
have the dubious honor of not solving the agency problem it was specifically
designed to address, but by legally prohibiting compensation for financial
professionals commensurate with their responsibilities and competence, it
encourages the outsourcing of an entire industry worth trillions of dollars and
hundreds of thousands of jobs. In short, fuck you, Mr. Taleb.
which I have called “black swan” events.
The irony of
promoting your own book while undermining the capitalistic system makes me want
to punch a swan out of spite. See, jackass? It’s the swan that bears the consequence
of your shamelessness.
The meltdown in the United States subprime mortgage market,
which set off the global financial crisis, is only the latest example of such
disasters.
This is an academic’s
smarmy way of saying “shit happens.”
Consider that we trust military and homeland security
personnel with our lives, yet we don’t give them lavish bonuses.
The military is a
lifestyle, not a job. Soldiers are often contractually compelled to continue
service. Quitting will get them jail time. Likewise, not obeying orders will
get them jail time. That combination is a pretty damn big stick that
market-based employers don’t (and can’t and shouldn’t) have.
They get promotions and the honor of a job well done if they
succeed, and the severe disincentive of shame if they fail.
This is why the
military (and for that matter, the police force as well) is more of a vocation
than a profession. Priests aren’t compensated by market factors. Social workers,
artists, and writers are all usually undercompensated by virtue of their
qualifications (most have postgraduate degrees), yet there is no shortage in
any of these fields because they are intrinsically rewarding. Banking, however,
is not.
For bankers, it is the opposite: a bonus if they make
short-term profits
It is reasonable that
bonuses should reflect a longer period of time, but this isn’t exactly a matter
of public policy. That’s between employer and employee.
and a bailout if they go bust.
I still don’t
understand how the bailout is a fait
accompli when virtually everyone acknowledges that it is unfair crony
capitalism and very few believe that it worked to alleviate the impact of
recession.
The question of talent is a red herring: Having worked with
both groups, I can tell you that military and security people are not only more
careful about safety, but also have far greater technical skill, than bankers.
That’s not what
talent actually means. The military does not recruit talent. It creates it through
massive training organizations because it is divorced from the profit motive. Private
industries have to hire talent—often from the military—because training is cost
prohibitive.
The ancients were fully aware of this
upside-without-downside asymmetry, and they built simple rules in response.
So why, instead of
re-instating a downside, are you instead eliminating the upside?
Nearly 4,000 years ago, Hammurabi’s code specified this: “If
a builder builds a house for a man and does not make its construction firm, and
the house which he has built collapses and causes the death of the owner of the
house, that builder shall be put to death.”
Which, in Ancient Wherever-The-Fuck,
caused the great housing bubble of 2000BC as building prices ballooned. This
principle hasn’t been abandoned; we have mountains of tort case law for these
situations. Here’s the rub: with few exceptions, the actions of banks--both
before, during, and after the housing bust--were neither criminal nor tortious.
This was simply the best risk-management rule ever.
We can’t get liberals
to support capital punishment for murder. Imagine trying to put someone for
death for mere incompetence (which they generally support).
The Babylonians
I prefer to call Babylon “Ancient
Wherever-The-Fuck.”
understood that the builder will always know more about the
risks than the client, and can hide fragilities and improve his profitability
by cutting corners — in, say, the foundation. The builder can also fool the
inspector; the person hiding risk has a large informational advantage over the
one who has to find it.
You’ll get no
argument from me. The question is not why we should punish poor performance,
but why you insist on not rewarding good performance.
Banning bonuses addresses the principal-agent problem in
economics:
Yeah. I know. I was
talking about this paragraphs ago. Let’s wrap this shit up. I’ve got things to
do.
the separation between an agent’s interests and those of the
client, or principal, he is supposed to represent. The potency of my
[bat-shit crazy]
solution lies in the idea that people do not consciously
wish to harm themselves;
Holy fuck! This dude
just cracked the code on the mystery of why self-mutilation isn’t socially
acceptable behavior! Let’s give him a Nobel Prize!
I feel much safer on a plane because the pilot, and not a
drone, is at the controls. Similarly, cooks should taste their own cooking;
engineers should stand under the bridges they have designed when the bridges
are tested; the captain should be the last to leave the ship.
Yes, the argument for
commensurate consequences is well taken. But you’re not arguing for
commensurate consequences. You’re arguing for no consequences. The fact that
you’re also arguing for no rewards is, I suppose, logically consistent, but it’s
still mildly retarded.
The Romans even figured out how to deter cowardice that
causes the death of others with the technique called decimation: If a legion
lost a battle and there was suspicion of cowardice, 10 percent of the soldiers
and commanders — usually chosen at random — were put to death.
Nothing says “justice”
like the cold rationality of arbitrary killings.
No such pain faces bailed-out, bonus-taking bankers.
A more sensitive
reader might infer that he’s calling for the death of 10% of bankers.
The period from 2000 to 2008 saw a very large accumulation
of hidden exposures in the financial system. And yet the year 2010 brought the
largest bank compensation in history.
It’s almost like
there was a prolonged, multi-year period in between those two events in which
all the other stuff got sorted out. Oh wait.
It has become clear that merely “clawing back” past bonuses
after the fact is not enough.
Nothing like passive verbs for issuing blanket statements of unassailable fact. No, Mr. Wizard, it has not become clear at all.
Supervision, regulation and other forms of monitoring are
necessary, but insufficient — consider that the Federal Reserve insisted, as
late as 2007, that the rapidly escalating subprime mortgage crisis was likely
to be “contained.”
Oh come on. The Fed
doesn’t exactly use the same language as the rest of us and you know it. They
lie all the time so as to not undermine investor confidence.
What would banking look like if bonuses were eliminated?
Bleak and
unprofitable.
It would not be too different from what it was like when I
was a bank intern in the 1980s,
The time-frame is
nothing short of pure hilarity. Go back to the Reagan years by reregulating!
before the wave of deregulation that culminated in the 1999
repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, the Depression-era law that had separated
investment and commercial banking.
The problem was
undervalued risk. That problem would have persisted whether or not commercial and
investment banks remained separated.
Before then, bankers and lenders were boring “lifers.”
Banking was bland and predictable; the chairman’s income was less than that of
today’s junior trader.
Thanks for the
nostalgia. I’m depressed already.
Investment banks, which paid bonuses and weren’t allowed to
lend, were partnerships with skin in the game, not gamblers playing with other
people’s money.
Again, the argument
that there should be skin in the game flies in the face of the assertion that
there should be no skin in the game. That is, after all, this article’s central
thesis of regulating bankers pay. (For the record, there is nary a whiff of
Constitutional justification for this gross overreach of federal authority
anywhere. After all, we need new laws to stop all of these violations of
non-laws.)
Hedge funds, which are loosely regulated, could take on some
of the risks that banks would shed under my proposal.
I agree. But here’s
the kicker: there’s no good reason to divorce investment institutions from
lending institutions. The risk is still there.
While we tend to hear about the successful ones, the great
majority fail and their failures rarely make the front page.
Taleb’s plan: boatloads
of underpublicized failure!
The principal-agent problem they have isn’t a problem for
taxpayers: Typically their investors manage the governance of hedge funds by
ensuring that the manager is hurt more than any of his investors in the event
of a blowup.
Now, explain how the
principal-agent problem is an issue if you allow firms to go bankrupt. Managers
and executives lose their jobs and get a giant black mark on their resumes, impairing future
employment. Shareholders (including managers and executives with equity compensation) lose most of their investment. The taxpayers, quite
literally, have no place in this event.
I believe that “less is more” — simple heuristics are
necessary for complex problems.
No you don’t, you
arrogant fuck. You believe that more regulation is more. What’s more, this isn’t a complex problem.
So instead of thousands of pages of regulation, we should
enforce a basic principle: Bonuses and bailouts should never mix.
That’s not what you
argued. You argued that bailouts are inevitable and that bonuses are nonsensical
means of compensation. Bailouts are purely in the public sphere. Bonuses are
purely in the private sphere. In order for you to balance your silly little
equation, you have decided that the private needs to become public, not that
the public needs to stay out of the private. It is in this point, the first one
that you made, that you ignored all questions about the proper role of
government and discounted the plausibility of effective, minimalistic
government in favor nationalization.
You want to go back
to the 80s in banking? The hours are 9-5, Monday through Friday, closed all
holidays, including arbor day and secretary’s day. Employees are unfriendly and unyielding. ATMs are sporadic and
inconvenient. Product lines are thin and uncustomizable. Customer service is a
joke. Margins are high because overhead is high. Barriers to entry for new
competitors are higher. Congratulations, Nassim Taleb. You’ve turned the most
profitable sector in the American economy into the DMV.
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