Goldman considers a mandate for charity

As it prepares to pay big bonuses to employees, Goldman Sachs is considering expansion

RELATED ARTICLES

of a programrequiring executives and top managers to give a certain percentage of their earnings to charity.

The expansion would be the latest in a series of initiatives by Goldman to soften criticism of the size of its bonuses, which are expected to be among the largest on Wall Street, bringing average pay to about $595,000 for each employee — with far higher amounts for top performers.

Goldman set aside $16.7 billion for compensation in the first nine months of 2009, and in good years, the firm dedicates about three-quarters of its compensation budget to year-end bonuses. The firm is expected to report later this month what could be record profit of about $12 billion for 2009, according to analysts’ estimates, compared with $11.7 billion in 2007. Its final compensation pool and executive bonuses will be announced then.

The firm said last month that its 30 most senior executives would be paid bonuses all in stock, but the bank placed no limit on how large those bonuses might be.

While the details of the latest charity initiative are still under discussion, the firm’s executives have been looking at expanding the charitable requirements for months and trying to understand whether such gestures would quell public anger over pay, according to a person familiar with the matter who did not want to be identified because of the delicacy of the pay issue.

The charity idea would be similar to a program that ran for decades at the failed investment bank Bear Stearns, which required more than 1,000 of its top workers to give 4 percent of their pay to charity each year and then checked their tax returns to ensure compliance.

Assuming a similar percentage and level of participation, that would mean Goldman’s top employees would commit to giving hundreds of millions of dollars to charity, though the precise amount would depend on the level of contributions and the number of workers who were required to take part.

It could not be determined whether Goldman would create a new program for its mandated giving or run it through Goldman Sachs Gives, which oversees donor-directed charity funds for Goldman workers. That program was created in 2007, weeks before Goldman paid its chief executive, Lloyd C. Blankfein, $68 million for that year. It required Goldman’s 400 or so partners to give an undisclosed amount to charity each year on their own or through the program.

Goldman declined to comment.

Amid a growing public outcry over big bonuses at Goldman and other Wall Street banks, Goldman said in October that the firmwould donate $200 million to its charitable foundation, nearly doubling the foundation’s size. (The Goldman Sachs Foundation is separate from Goldman Sachs Gives.) It also created a $500 million fund to lend to small businesses, a sector that has suffered in the tight credit environment. The plan will be overseen in part by the billionaire Warren E. Buffett, who is a large Goldman investor.

Moreover, the firm — which initially was on track to pay closer to $650,000 to $700,000 on average to its workers — has scaled back planned bonuses by cutting the amount of revenue set aside for compensation, apparently in response to negative public reaction. People familiar with the matter said that Goldman was planning to reduce further the portion of revenue dedicated to compensation in the fourth quarter.

Still, these measures have done little to quell criticism of bankers’ bonuses, and it is unclear whether Goldman’s latest idea, if adopted, would alter the public mood and the feeling in Washington that big pay packages are inappropriate, given the troubled U.S. economy.

On Sunday, Christina D. Romer, head of the president’s top economic council, said on CNN’s ‘‘State of the Union’’ that it was ‘‘ridiculous’’ that banks planned to pay billions in bonuses for last year.

The payout, she said, was ‘‘going to offend the American people. It offends me.’’ For their work in 2008, 953 Goldman employees were paid more than $1 million; the bank accepted $10 billion in U.S. bailout cash, though it has since repaid the money, as have most other banks, freeing them from government limits on compensation.

Post new comment

E-mail ID will not be published
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Copy the characters (respecting upper/lower case) from the image.

FC NEWSLETTER

Stay informed on our latest news!

EDITORIAL OF THE DAY

  • Inheritance tax can open Gates to corporate responsibility

    Tech kids — Rishad Premji, Akshata Murthy, Shruti Shibulal, Arihant Gajendra Kumar Patni and Uday Jain — are today crorepatis by virtue of their s

INTERVIEWS

Deepak Chandnani

President, Obopay

Anand Sharma

Commerce and industry minister

Thomas Matthew

MD, LIC

COLUMNIST

Varun Dutt

Carbon storage has challenges

According to so­me experts, global coal consumption is projected to ...

Paulo Coelho

Navel was sacred in ancient cultures

It was precisely a poster of Britney Spears that made ...

Bubbles Sabharwal

When you want to see God, don’t look up, look within

A friend in school, who was not too bright, not ...