Wall Street Bonuses Top $20 Billion in 2009: Report

I need to go to work on Wall Street. Apparently, that's where all the money is flowing.

A new report from New York's state Comptroller shows that despite being bailed out by taxpayers in 2008, Wall Street firms paid out more than $20 billion in bonuses in 2009, with the average Wall Street worker getting a bonus that totaled $124,850.

That $20 billion payday is a staggering amount of money in any economy. But for for it to have happened during the global economic meltdown, when banks were basically crying poor, is absolutely incredible.

I don't have a problem with a valuable employee in any industry earning a six or even a seven-figure salary. What bothers me though, is that there has been little to no accountability for taxpayer dollars. Some of these same banks that received hundreds of millions in TARP funding turned around and did whatever they wanted to do with the money: and that includes paying big bonuses. Also, what happened to "pay for performance"? If Wall Street was doing so horribly, how come these guys (and women) pulled down these mammoth paychecks.

Not to mention my primary concern: Where is the money banks and other financial institutions were supposed to provide for lending to consumers? Where is the credit being made available to those who need student loans for their kids' college education, mortgages to buy their first home or auto financing to get a new set of wheels? A big chunk of that taxpayer money funneled to the banking and financial services industry should have been earmarked to do exactly what we were told it would do: ease the credit crunch.

But based on what I hear every day from individual consumers and small businesses alike, the credit crunch is alive and well. Yes, we got some relief due to the Credit Card Reform Act. But that was about reining in questionable banking and marketing practices. Credit and loans still aren't flowing on Main Street. Plus, major lenders and other credit card issuers still exert a great deal of power over cash-strapped consumers -- even as Wall Streeters laugh all the way to the bank.




Lynnette Khalfani-Cox, an award-winning financial news journalist and former Wall Street Journal reporter for CNBC, has also been featured in top newspapers including the Washington Post, USA Today, and the New York Times, as well as magazines ranging from Essence and Redbook to Black Enterprise and Smart Money. Check out her New York Times bestseller, 'Zero Debt: The Ultimate Guide to Financial Freedom.'

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