When Santa came to Wall Street this year, the media cried and pouted.
With the Dow Jones Industrial Average at an all-time high and commodities markets experiencing one of their best years in decades, Wall Street firms were feeling especially merry this year. The media responded as if they had seen Jacob Marley’s ghost.
NBC’s John Seigenthaler gloomily downplayed Wall Streeters’ good fortunes by stating:
“Most U.S. businesses – 66 percent – give no bonuses at all.” ABC’s Nancy Cordes quipped, “You could feed 700,000 children for a year” with what the top earner at Goldman Sachs received.
The Washington Post was concerned that these bonuses were “another reminder of the ever-widening gap between the super-rich and everyone else.” And, the Boston Globe worried that what was being lavished on Wall Street types was “more than three times the average salary of a Massachusetts surgeon.”
Amid all the squabbling was a convenient amnesia about how pleased the press were about these bonuses the final Christmas season of the ’90s, right before the NASDAQ peaked and the three-year bear market in stocks began.
NBC’s Pat Dawson said on the Dec. 22, 1999, “Nightly News,” “Wall Street's billions in profit means a Big Apple boom.” CBS’s Anthony Mason interviewed a Manhattan business owner on the Dec. 11, 1999, “Evening News” who was celebrating the announcements of the leading brokerage firms: “Thank God Wall Street's having a good year.”
It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Coveting
Evoking envy is certainly not a new affectation for the media. In fact, the class warfare card is regularly played throughout the year. However, this Christmas journalists have displayed Ebenezer Scrooge-like disgust, finding it unimaginable that people should be paid large bonuses.
The worst offender was certainly NBC. On the December 16 “Nightly News,” anchor John Seigenthaler drearily stated: “Most U.S. businesses – 66 percent – give no bonuses at all. Those employees lucky enough to receive a cash gift will get an average of $837. Compare that to the bonuses Goldman Sachs gives out, a jackpot so big they could give every employee more than $600,000.”
Mike Taibbi’s report followed, and he later expanded on the divide between rich and poor: "But to many, today's version of the haves and have-nots feels different. In the boom of the Clinton years – and I'm talking a chronological, not a political distinction – the rising tide of that bull market truly did lift all boats, or at least a whole lot more of them."
After interviewing a finance assistant who was “[living] paycheck by paycheck just to pay for mortgages, gas, electric, everything,” Taibbi added: “Working Americans now pay more of their pension and health care costs; and food, fuel and service costs have risen faster than most salaries. That means even those who do get small bonuses still struggle."
In second place for this year’s Scrooge award was The Washington Post, which published a business briefing on December 17 with a concluding paragraph that could have been uttered by the Grinch himself:
Still, news of Wall Street's Very, Very Good Year is likely to stir some resentment on Main Street – not because the economy is so bad as much as it is yet another reminder of the ever-widening gap between the super-rich and everyone else. Are those pay packages really a reflection of the Wall Streeters' superior skill, training and ingenuity? Or are they a reflection of the lack of price competition in an industry that is allowed to earn monopoly-like fees and profit? Or could it be that the new barons of finance are merely the beneficiaries of some old-fashioned dumb luck.
The Boston Globe also seemed to be lacking the free-market Christmas spirit when it published an article on December 13 stating the bonuses given out by Goldman Sachs this year were “more than three times the average salary of a Massachusetts surgeon; four times that of a Massachusetts chief executive; and nearly 12 times that of a Massachusetts high school teacher, according to the state's Department of Workforce Development.”
The Globe’s Robert Gavin continued: “Still, these outsized earnings renewed concerns about the growing gap between rich and poor in the United States, and whether the benefits of the economic expansion are getting distributed equitably. The payday also renewed questions about the value society places on different kinds of work.”
But pay doesn’t depend on the value society as a whole places on work – it depends on what individual professions deem valuable. Professional athletes are but one example, clearly making more than police, firemen or doctors. While journalists worry about economic benefits getting “distributed equally,” they haven’t reported on the millions pulled in – or any charitable “distribution” doled out – by some of their own.
“News anchors are paid stratospheric salaries,” reported the New York Daily News on April 5, 2006. Salaries reported in the article included Katie Couric, $15 million; Diane Sawyer, $13 million; Charles Gibson (who has since been promoted), $7 million; and Brian Williams, $4 million.
But Maybe It’s Ok if They Earned It …
CNN took a different approach on its December 16 “In the Money” – acknowledging that bonuses could be tied to actual work. “Headline News” correspondent Jennifer Westhoven introduced the president of a recruitment firm by stating: “It's just the holiday bonus that's disappearing, right? We're not talking about performance bonuses, which actually seem to be on the rise.” Her guest agreed, “The holiday bonus is disappearing and certainly the performance bonus is taking its place.”
CNN correspondent Christine Romans then interjected another point lost on the envious: “I think a lot of those people are getting those big bonuses worked like a 100 hours a week.”
Romans elaborated on this theme: “In a weird way the bonuses are little more justifiable than maybe a holiday bonus that is just because you have worked there for a year. Because those bonuses are tied to how well you did for the firm.”
Ignoring Christmases Past
The press seemed to miss how jubilant they were during the 1999 Christmas season before that bull market came to an unhappy end. In particular, the “NBC Nightly News” – quite dour in 2006 – was marvelously merry on Dec. 22, 1999. Correspondent Pat Dawson even stated that Wall Street was responsible for saving New York’s economy: “In fact, so much money is being made here, it's turned around the fortunes of this entire city. A few years back, New York was in a tailspin; then the bulls started running. Now, Wall Street's billions in profit means a Big Apple boom.”
The Dec. 11, 1999, “CBS Evening News” also saw the upside to brokerage firm bonuses as Anthony Mason interviewed an absolutely joyous business owner who proclaimed: “Thank God Wall Street's having a good year. We – we have more parties this year than we've ever had before.”
Certainly, the tone has changed in seven years. However, despite forgetting the past, there is something far more unfortunate about the Christmas bonus reporting this year: given how the nation suffered during the three-year stock bear market that mercifully ended in March 2003, Main Street should always be merry when Wall Street is doing well.
—Noel Sheppard is the Associate Editor of NewsBusters. Follow him at Facebook and Twitter.




















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WS bonus
December 20, 2006 - 15:07 ET by Tom BlumerYou could not be more correct about the contrast. I also believe that in real terms the bonuses of 1997, 1998, and 1999 dwarfed those of the past couple of years. Yet they seldom got out of the biz pages and when they did, as you noted, they were treated as good news for NYC.
Post-9/11, but for partisanship, such bonuses would be treated as aiding in the completion of NYC's recovery.
Tom
December 20, 2006 - 15:23 ET by Noel SheppardTom,
If your "real terms" means inflation adjusted, today's bonuses are higher. The total bonuses given in 1999 was $13 billion. Inflation adjusted, that would be about $16 billion. Goldman Sachs is giving that by themselves. I've seen estimates of between $26 and $35 billion for this year. So, I don't think we can just attribute this to inflation. If that had been the case, I would have made that point.
However, the disparity in the coverage of the markets between then and now is staggering. Stocks going up was good back then. Today, it's a sign of greed and an expansion of the gap between haves and have nots. In the end, as we are all living in a capitalist free market wherein virtually all aspects of our lives have some connection to how much we earn and possess, it is deplorable how these media types who make significantly more than the average person look down their noses at the prosperity of others.
In fact, the hypocrisy becomes even more apparent when you consider how the declines in stocks like Enron, Worldcom, and Adelphia were depicted in 2001 and 2002 as hurting average Americans. Yet, when stocks go up, only the rich benefit. What a sham!!! ns
So great to see these side-by
December 20, 2006 - 16:50 ET by TruthMongerSo great to see these side-by-side comparisons of blatantly two-faced and partisan MSM news coverage piling up in the NB archives, Noel! Even the old USSR Praavda wasn't this much of a pathetic joke...
Come on...every single person
December 20, 2006 - 15:18 ET by bigtimerCome on...every single person in the real world that is political knows darn good and well if this was during a Democrat administration the situation would be reversed with how the leftist in the msm reports the economic news....
Period.
"Once the coffers of the federal government are opened to the public, there will be no shutting them again." - Grover Cleveland
bigtimer,Correct.
December 20, 2006 - 16:27 ET by AntiMediabigtimer,
Correct.
I tell you what, I'll take th
December 20, 2006 - 15:21 ET by dscottI tell you what, I'll take their carping about disperity of wages seriously when the MSM takes a serious pay cut like down to the average American's wage. Until then, shout it from the roof tops: HYPOCRISY!!!
BTW- How am I poorer when Bill Gates gets richer? Only an idiot socialist who doesn't fathom wealth creation can claim this as a bad thing. Capitalism is not a zero sum game where one person has to get poorer so another can get richer. Capitalism is the only economic system that creates wealth. It only works that way in Socialism where the proletariat is kept down by the ruling elite. You know, the redistribution of wealth scam.
“The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” – Marcus Aurelius
Excellent point! It's easy
December 20, 2006 - 15:38 ET by sphigelExcellent point! It's easy to argue economics with a liberal if you just keep repeating two points: Wealth is not a zero sum game and when two parties make a transaction both must feel that they benefit from it. Most of the libs arguments are based on economic fallacies contrary to these two absolute facts.
Dan
December 20, 2006 - 15:43 ET by Noel SheppardDan,
Well, if you remember the movie "Wall Street," that's not what Gecko felt. He believed that money isn't created. It's just moved from one sphere of reality to another. So, in the investment arena, when I win, someone else in theory has lost.
Of course, that assumes that the money supply is not growing, and we know that it indeed is. Furthermore, "Wall Street" was made well before the expansion of the global economy. As such, the money supplies of most nations outside of the EU are growing quite precipitously. So, my gain in a stock could be the loss of someone in Kuwait for example. ns
Well, the problem with me is
December 20, 2006 - 16:39 ET by dscottWell, the problem with me is I don't pay attention to movies for my facts, I read guys like John Maynard Keynes. The reality in a capitalist society is whenever interest or profit is charged, wealth is created not redistributed from someone else. Here's something else to ponder, the seed of all investment comes from profit, if it were not so then governments would have to tax to wrest wealth from it's people. This is why the Soviet Union crumbled, stuck in the redistribution of wealth cycle, in order to advance the nation with investment they had to plunder the citizen. An economy can not grow unless wealth is created. Growth is impossible under Socialism because of theory of "excess value".
“The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” – Marcus Aurelius
Dan
December 20, 2006 - 17:32 ET by Noel SheppardDan,
I brought up Gecko just as a sidebar. I find him to be an interesting character. However, as an Oliver Stone creation, his views on capitalism weren't completely accurate. ns
No negative criticism intende
December 21, 2006 - 15:51 ET by dscottNo negative criticism intended Noel, I was focusing on a common misconception of economics that some people get all self righteous about because they haven't a clue as to how the world really works.
“The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” – Marcus Aurelius
Dan
December 21, 2006 - 15:58 ET by Noel SheppardDan,
No offense taken. ns
Whether or not the money supp
December 20, 2006 - 17:13 ET by sphigelWhether or not the money supply is growing is not the issue. The issue is what can be bought with the money available.
Looking at your investment analogy. If you win it does not mean that someone else has lost. You "won" because whatever you invested in was deemed a valuable service/product by the American people. The business you invested in made money which was more valuable to them than the product they were selling. The product received by the customer was more valuable to them than the money payed for it. Both customer and seller/investor win.
As for other competing businesses, sure I guess you could say that they lose if their product isn't as successful because of your added competition to the market. I don't quite understand how anyone can perceive that as a bad thing though.
sphigel
December 20, 2006 - 17:29 ET by Noel Sheppardsp,
Actually, if money supply is constant, then whenever someone's assets increase, someone else's has to decrease. If we assume that there is only $1,000 out there, every time my worth goes up by a dollar, somebody has to be losing. That's the concept of a zero sum game.
Furthermore, if I buy a stock for $10 let's say, and the stock goes up, whoever I bought it from has lost. If the person who sold it was short, he or she had to buy it back at a higher price for a loss. If the seller was long, the seller had opportunity loss that I realized as a gain. See what I mean.
As such, unless the money supply is growing, every investment transaction involves a winner and a loser. Make sense? ns
"Actually, if money supp
December 20, 2006 - 17:34 ET by sphigel"Actually, if money supply is constant, then whenever someone's assets increase, someone else's has to decrease."
If I go chop some trees down on my land and build a house worth x amount of money, my assets have increased. Who exactly loses from this?
sphigel
December 20, 2006 - 17:49 ET by Noel SheppardThe person who buys it. Prior to that point, its value is irrelevant.
However, did you buy any other materials to build this house that cost you money? Did you hire any contractors? Did you buy any paint, or shingles, or windows? Did you pay to get electricity, water, and plumbing, or is this a cold log cabin? Without these things, your house isn't worth very much, is it?
What was your cost of actually building this house besides the wood from the trees on your land? ns
I guess I'm confused at what
December 20, 2006 - 17:40 ET by sphigelI guess I'm confused at what your getting at. Lets say there is only a $1000 out there. If people's assets continue to go up then won't the money that is out there become more valuable. In essence it would be deflation. Inflation is caused be increasing the money supply at too great of a rate so I would think the opposite would be true. I guess if the value of the dollar went up due to deflation that could be seen as an increase in the money supply.
sphigel
December 20, 2006 - 21:18 ET by Noel SheppardSP,
You're missing the concept of a zero sum game. Let's assume we're playing Monopoly, and you only get money from the bank at the beginning of the game. No money when you pass go. No "Community Chest." No surprise inheritances. What everybody gets at the beginning of the game is the ceiling. That's a zero sum game.
Now, having said that, this is not what we have in America, and why I disagreed with Gecko's point. However, I would suggest to you that to a certain extent, this is what exists in the EU. The EU have such tight restrictions on monetary growth in all of the countries that are members that it is making it very difficult for these economies to grow. And, even though the ECB claims to want a weaker euro, the tight monetary policy keeps the euro up. ns
Noel, sphigel, when the gover
December 21, 2006 - 12:13 ET by MikeBNoel, sphigel, when the government attempts to control the economy so that there is no growth in the money supply, you get a black market, an "under the tabel" economy, and/or a barter system that circumvents government controls. Of course, it was much easier to control money supply when money was physical bits of precious metals. It became more difficult when paper money and fractional reserves were introduced to the economy. It is nearly impossible now that "money" is mostly magnetic orientation in computer cores.
"A communist is someone who reads Marx. An anti-communist is someone who understands Marx." Ronald Reagan
The problem with the so calle
December 21, 2006 - 15:44 ET by dscottThe problem with the so called physical bits of precious metals means of monetary policy favors recession and stagflation. The money supply only grows as more gold and silver are mined from the earth and then minted into coin. It should be intuitive that the amount of gold and silver have a finite quantity on the earth. So under the Gold standard, the money supply is virtually stagnant. This would be fine if the population wasn't growing. From the time of the Civil War when the Gold Standard was dropped until now, the population of the US has zoomed past 100 million to 300 million today. Under your scenerio either the money supply has to grow by three fold to maintain the gold per person ratio or stagflation results. Just from this example you should see the absolute necessity of the Federal Reserve and the US Mint printing paper money to maintain stabilty of prices. It is simply impossible to coin enough gold and silver to maintain economic order.
Again I will remind everyone that the value of Gold and Silver is based on belief, faith if you will. Why should a pound of gold be worth more than a pound of lead? Because we physcologically want it so, nothing more. An excellent example of this is diamonds, we believe diamonds are a rare commodity because of the De Beers diamond cartel hording diamonds and controlling their sale to prop up their value. In fact, diamonds are a common gem stone.
“The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” – Marcus Aurelius
Class envy sucks. People don'
December 20, 2006 - 16:05 ET by dvdaughtryClass envy sucks. People don't get paid on the nobility of work, they get paid for the amount of money generate. As soon as scientists, doctors, and teachers start generating revenue that Barry Bonds, Tom Hanks, and the rest of the entertainment field brings, then and only then will they get the kind of money pro sports et al receives.
My biggest problem with this comes down to one question: Would they (MSM, or anyone upset with the size of the bonus) turn it down if offered to them?
DVD
December 20, 2006 - 16:10 ET by Noel SheppardYes.
In keeping with the MSM spin,
December 20, 2006 - 16:32 ET by GothampcIn keeping with the MSM spin, no mention of the taxes the government collects on those bonuses.
Gotham
December 20, 2006 - 16:41 ET by Noel SheppardG,
Good point. Actually, the taxes on such bonuses are huge. Much better for the state and the fed than if these people were given stock options. ns
"Actually, the taxes on
December 20, 2006 - 17:04 ET by Gothampc"Actually, the taxes on such bonuses are huge."
I work in the financial industry, (although not in a position that gets the whopper bonus) so I know!
Additionally, what they fail to mention is that many of workers who get bonuses spend them on goods and services which (surprise, surprise) helps the economy by creating more jobs. Believe me, the majority of the people I work with already have plans for their bonuses. Vacations, clothes, house redecorating and technology (computer, Ipod) seem to be what people I work with are spending on.
At a whopping 35% of the take
December 20, 2006 - 16:41 ET by dscottAt a whopping 35% of the take no less. See that annual budget deficit shrinking???
“The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” – Marcus Aurelius
"See that annual budget
December 21, 2006 - 12:21 ET by MikeB"See that annual budget deficit shrinking?" No, not until Congress (both parties) stop spending tax revenues like a drunken sailor in a (house of ill repute) What is that economic law? "Expenditures rise to meet income." And, as long as Congress can dictate to the people how much income the government has, that budget deficit will stay in place.
Some things I'd like to see: Congress' pay cut to where they make the national median income, term limits for congress, no congressional pension, congressional pay raises only upon approval of a supermajority of the taxpayers. I'd also like to see these conditions imposed on state legislatures, and I will see them...when pigs fly and politicians are honest.
"A communist is someone who reads Marx. An anti-communist is someone who understands Marx." Ronald Reagan