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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

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Letters: No slowdown in your opinions

Letters in a computer with red mailbox flag

Kai Ryssdal reviews your comments about AIG's infamous bonuses, the securitization industry, and suggested names for this recession.

Letters in a computer with red mailbox flag (iStockPhoto)

TEXT OF STORY

Kai Ryssdal: It's tough to tell exactly who listens to this program, but it's entirely possible there are a bunch of AIG executives out there tuning in. As we now know, 15 of the top 20 recipients of those infamous bonuses have agreed to give the money back. Last week, though, it was a very different story. And if our inbox is any indication, Americans were, and probably still are, outraged.

Greg Ehrensing from Corte Madera, Calif., offered one idea for how to pay up as the contracts seem to require, but still satisfy the irate taxpayer.

GREG EHRENSING: Public shame! Cut the checks, set up a table in Times Square and announce that all the recipients can come pick up their checks in pubic on a Saturday afternoon, if they dare.

Rob Woods from Willis, Va., sees the story a different way.

ROB WOODS: I find it interesting that everyone is in a tizzy about the $165 million in bonuses that AIG handed out. Citizens, through taxes, have given them approximately $170 billion. That's over 1,000 times as much as the bonus payments. It would be like borrowing $10 from a family member and then getting all upset over how one penny of that money was spent.

Our senior correspondent Bob Moon did a piece last week on the securitization industry, those are the folks who bundle up mortgages and other loans and sell them off by the slice. Garret Lo of San Diego, Calif., voted "no" on the question Bob's piece posed: Whether the industry ought to rise again.

GARRET LO: Clearly, the securitization folks don't get it. Don't they realize that all of the over leveraging of our financial system only created a house of cards that we're currently seeing tumble before our eyes?

It's not all gloom and doom, even though sometimes it feels like it is. Economist Justin Wolfers did a commentary for us recently where he pondered different names for this thing that's happening to the economy. He offered "the flump." We asked for your ideas.

And in no particular order, we got the "Soft Depression," the "Great Reality Check," the "Great Come-Uppance" and a combination of Depression and Recession -- the "Decession." Keep 'em coming, no matter what they are. You can send us your suggestions -- etymological or otherwise.

Comments

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  • By Julie Battle

    From Springdale, PA, 03/27/2009

    suggested names for this recession:

    the Great Effluence

    Similar to what others are suggesting, but nice to pronounce in polite company. I feel like my 401(k)s that I sacrificed so very much of my life for have gone in the toilet. Same as other people's - like a great effluence.

    By Allen Sullivan

    From Easton, CT, 03/25/2009

    After the failure of "trickle-down ecomomics" to do anything other than financially ruin most Main-Street Americans I think there is only one thing to call our current situation (for obvious reasons): The Great Defecation."

    By George Gibbs

    From Latham, NY, 03/25/2009

    After the last eight years and in homage to it, I think the resulting depression ought to go by the moniker "The Rush to Limbo."

    By George Gibbs

    From Latham, NY, 03/25/2009

    After the last eight years and in homage to it, I think the resulting depression ought to go by the moniker "The Rush to Limbo."

    By Jill Harrod

    From San Diego, CA, 03/25/2009

    An Acronym for this economic situation might be R.U.E (as is sorrow) short for Remediation of Unsupportable Expectations

    By Trevor Daniels

    From Los Angeles, CA, 03/25/2009

    I have several thoughts about AIG and the $165 million in bonuses paid to execs. Although it is definitely not the time to be paying out that type of money when your organization has performed poorly, I am reminded that those who received the money did work for it. I hold a doctorate degree and would love to be monitarily recognized for the work that I do, as business professionals often are. However, despite the amount, I am entitled to be paid, as AGREED, for the work that I do. If my work does not justify the amount I am compensated, then the regulation needs to be in company policy, and not in my front yard with threats of public shame or public disclosure. If we are to get a handle on this out of control spending, address those who make policy, not those who are being paid according to contractual terms.

    By Tim Nackashi

    From Los Angeles, CA, 03/24/2009

    My suggestion for the current economic downturn:
    The Not-So-Great Depression

    By Gwendolyn Farnsworth

    From Boulder, CO, 03/24/2009

    In response to Rob Woods,true, $165 million is a small portion of $170 billion. The problem is ethical. The individuals who got those bonuses would not have jobs at all now if the taxpayers did not bail out AIG. They should be thankful to have a job. It is clear that they do not deserve a bonus. In any other industry, employees do not get bonuses unless the company is doing well. The fact that this is not obvious in the financial industry is just another indicator that they do not know how to run a business.

    By Chris Hugo

    From SK, 03/24/2009

    Depression 2.0. That's the name that'll stick, just wait and see.

    By Sylvia Shriner

    From Ellensburg, WA, 03/24/2009

    To borrow a page from Malcolm X, the times we are living in should be called the Big Bamboozle. All the financial wizards have been trying to hoodwink each other, not to mention the common man, for decades. Now everyone is paying for their greed.

    By Dolores Maminski

    From Westminster, MD, 03/24/2009

    Here's my 2 cents worth (which is about what I have left): The Great Resuscitation.

    By Vivian Galligan

    From Bloomington, IN, 03/24/2009

    Name the recession - I did months ago! Clearly, since everything else about ths Baby Boomers has been bigger and better, we are now experience the Greater Depression.

    By Penny Gentle

    From Camden, ME, 03/24/2009

    Some segments of the economic downturn are a con-cession!

    By jim boakes

    From westampton, NJ, 03/24/2009

    Homeowner Retribution

    If Divine Retribution is a supernatural punishment usually directed towards all or some portions of humanity by a deity, then what we are experiencing is the effects of home owners who feel that they have been abused and have retaliated by defaulting on their debts.

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