NY Magazine’s Kevin Roose writes: The same day that John Paulson is considering
fleeing taxes on his billions by moving to Puerto Rico, the U.K.'s Telegraph
reports that Wall Street bankers are complaining that they're not paid enough.
67.2 percent of bankers complained in a recent survey by recruiting firm Selby
Jennings that they were “unhappy with their overall remuneration package"
in 2012. (Here is the rest of the survey, if you're curious. Some of the
numbers — such as the nearly one quarter of all bankers surveyed who didn't get
a bonus at all last year — are genuinely surprising, given how central bonuses
are to Wall Street's compensation culture.)
I've defended the Wall Street bonus as a pay mechanism,
though not the amounts involved. And I'm sure that, after years of boom-time
pay, the lower levels of recent years have been a disappointment to many in the
sector — especially junior bankers, for whom the missing thousands of bonus
dollars will make a real lifestyle difference. Still, it's hard to have much sympathy for the plight of underpaid
bankers…
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