G20 aims at bank pay and capital; stimulus to stay

LONDON (Reuters) – G20 finance leaders yesterday  took aim at excessive bank pay and risk-taking at the root of  the financial crisis and insisted trillions of dollars of  emergency economic supports would be needed for some time.
Although the global economy looks brighter than when the  Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers met in April,  their closing statement said they would not remove economic  stimulus until the recovery was well entrenched.

While the timing of these eventual policy reversals may  vary, the G20 said for the first time there should be some  coordination to avoid adverse international fallout.
But as the focus shifted from crisis-fighting to  establishing a safer financial system for the future, ministers  searched for consensus on precise plans to rein in bankers’ huge  bonuses and use more of their profits to build buffers against  any future crisis.

“We cannot put the world in a position where things go back  to where they were at the peak of the boom,” US Treasury  Secretary Timothy Geithner said.

“It cannot happen, will not happen and you can’t expect the  markets to solve that problem on their own because it’s a huge  collective action problem…so it has to come through things  that countries legislate.”
On the public stage, the message was one of solidarity as  policymakers agreed they must keep spending the $5 trillion  already earmarked as economic stimulus and delay any unwinding  of emergency fiscal and monetary measures until economies are  sturdy enough to stand on their own.

“The classic errors of economic policy during crises are  that governments tend to act too late with insufficient force  and then put the brakes on too early,” Geithner said. “We are  not going to repeat those mistakes.”

In a final statement, the G20 officials from rich and  developing countries also said they would work with the  International Monetary Fund and Financial Stability Board to  develop cooperative and coordinated exit strategies.
Behind the scenes, some G20 sources expressed frustration  that there was not more progress made in curbing excessive pay  packages for bankers — particularly those employed by firms  that have received billions of dollars in government support.

“There is broad agreement on what to do. The problem is we  need to go beyond agreement. We need to have concrete measures,”  said International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn.  “I’m impressed by the level of consensus but I’m still waiting  for strong measures to be decided and also to be implemented at  the national level.”
Much of the public pressure before the meeting had centred   on excessive bank remuneration, particularly for those who  worked at banks receiving billions of dollars in public aid.  “It is offensive to the public whose taxpayers’ money in  different ways has helped (keep) many banks from collapsing and  is now underpinning their recovery,” British Prime Minister  Gordon Brown said at the start of yesterday’s meetings.

On pay and bonuses in the financial sector, the statement  fell short of calling for caps, saying that: “We also ask the  Financial Stability Board to explore possible approaches for  limiting total variable remuneration in relation to risk and  long-term performance.”

That was seen as a compromise between France and Germany,  which had pushed hard for pay limits, and Britain, the United  States and Canada, which were opposed to caps. But it also  effectively delayed a tricky political issue until the  Pittsburgh summit later this month.