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Sandy Weill gives up Citigroup corporate jet

Over the weekend, the New York Post reported that former Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C) Chief Executive Sandy Weill and his family flew on a company jet for a vacation in Mexico weeks after the New York-based bank received a $45 billion bailout from the federal government and said it would slash 75,000 jobs. Today, the now-disgraced banker said he will give up the perk

According to the Wall Street Journal, "Weill's office said in a statement on Monday morning that `in light of the unprecedented circumstances that Citi finds itself in' he decided to stop using Citi aircraft immediately." Wow, if you did not know any better you would have thought he had given up his left arm instead of a seat on a luxurious jet.

Continue reading Sandy Weill gives up Citigroup corporate jet

Is there a new reality on Wall Street pay?

One of the questions that I spent this week discussing is this: What was Wall Street thinking? Whether it's using taxpayer money to pay itself $18.4 billion in bonuses or to buy a $50 million corporate jet after posting $35 billion in losses, people are wondering whether Wall Street gets it. The answer is yes. Wall Street gets that nobody stopped it from paying bonuses when it took our money, so it took what it could. Unless we limit how Wall Street spends taxpayer money, it will keep paying itself big bonuses.

Wall Street is a place where the people at the top are trained to grab as much as they can out of the hands of the other graspers. At least $200 billion worth of TARP money went to Wall Street with no strings attached. If you put that much money into the hands of a culture that believes firmly in taking what it can get -- it usually pays half of its revenues to employees -- you end up with Wall Street taking as much as it can from the taxpayers.

Continue reading Is there a new reality on Wall Street pay?

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Last updated: May 26, 2012: 01:38 PM

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