Mervyn King has weighed in on the bonus debate. The guvnor says big payouts have encouraged too many talented people to squander their lives in banking when they could have been doing something more constructive instead.
King made his comments to the Treasury Select Committee.
According to the Telegraph, King says young people look at City compensation packages and think they “dominate almost any other type of career ... It's not a very attractive situation that such a high proportion of our talented young people naturally look at the City and think it is the only place to work in. It shouldn't be. It should be one of the places, but not the only one.”
Talented yoof confirm Merv’s fears. One Cambridge student confesses that he might think of doing a medical PhD or going into the voluntary sector were it not for the fact that he’s leaving university with a £15k overdraft and needs the cash.
“During my gap year I worked at Pizza Hut and earned £200 pounds a week. As a summer intern in an investment bank I’ll be earning £700 pounds a week. There’s no comparison,” he says.
“Put bluntly, yes, people do go into investment banking for the money,” confirms Gordon Chesterman, head of the Cambridge University Careers Service. “But we do work hard to promote a wide variety of other careers.”
Bonuses may not need to be reformed to put students off – mass redundancies should be a more effective deterrent.
However, they don’t seem to have had an impact yet. Martin Birchall, director of High Fliers Research, a company which monitors top students’ career aspirations, says a record number of students want to go into investment banking this year: “Despite all the problems in the City, it's still as desirable as ever.”
Are you overpaid? Should bonuses be reformed? Have your say below.
There is a very good saying: "Why traders earn so much for adding so little to economy." The answer: "Because WE are awesome!"
Add your comment »I have a Phd from Cambridge and the CFA and i can tell u that Henry talks rubbish!
Add your comment »"I am an ultra-competitive person, hence a good trader (who was promoted to Vice President 4 years after starting as a grad, age 26). The circumstances of lesser people mean absolutely nothing compared to my goals. Why on earth would I want to waste time helping other people when I can better myself? I'm not going to feel good about helping others when the opportunity cost is a 6-figure bonus (which will be 7 by the time I'm 28). There is no greater feeling than performing head and shoulders above your rivals / competition / peers."
:-D Ahahahahahah that guy is a joke! Well, in fact he forgot to add that he was born 2008 years ago in a small cowshed somewhere near Bethléem... So all of us, lesser people, can't understand.....
By the way, Henri, as a top investment banker with 80 hours weeks and competition in mind where do you find the time to indulge us with your wisdom? You alone wrote more post than all others contributors... ;)
Add your comment »how on earth does your PhD & CFA qualify you to say Henry's talking rubbish? (again, not wanting to focus on whether or not Henry is who he says he is, but the data that he's supplied IS PRETTY ACCURATE).
PhD/CFA man - you are a typical example of young people that i come across from time to time, trying to get jobs in dealing rooms: extremely bright; right school, right uni, always a flawless CV, a route into see the deskhead through a friend of the parents etc etc. I don't dispute your ability, and i'm sure you'll end up doing well, maybe even in banking, but the fact is that right now you don't know diddly squat about financial markets, or what goes on on a trading floor. i can only think that by being on this site you, you want a career in the city? if you want to go places, i'd drop the "qualification attitude" pretty quickly!
Sorry Sir for having an opinion. I didn't say anything about numbers. I just say that i have the same "elite formation" than him but i don't consider myself as the best of the best compare to "lesser people". He is outrageously pretentious and what he says is mostly rubbish in my view. If you don't share it no problemo.
Add your comment »fair enough, and re-reading my post it sounds a little aggressive, but i am surprised that people are coming in saying "this is rubbish", "that's not true", citing some kind of better knowledge (i.e. probably their own comp, and that of those around them in their Tier 2/3 shops)? Nothing against these people, or where they work, but they should realise that top performers at top banks earn (even in formative years) can earn stupidly large amounts.
Add your comment »Absolutely spot on, spot n forward. Nothing frustrates me more than people asserting that I'm lying or talking nonsense, just because they're lower calibre so will never experience the numbers I'm talking about. I'm talking a good desk in the front office of a bulge bracket, nothing less. And the comments about how I manage to spend a few minutes a day posting on this site when I should be so busy at work if I'm making so much money show an unbelievable ignorance about the relationship between alpha generation and work input. Seems to be a lot of naive people here thinking that if they do a BSc -> MSc -> PhD -> CFA -> MBA and work really hard they'll be financially successful. Fortunately other things matter a lot too. Such as, a public school network of buy-side clients.
Add your comment »Apparently we don't share the same values. But thank you for admitting u were aggressive. Again, i AGGREE with the numbers simply because i'm not that young and in fact i earn much more than him so i know he is not exaggerating at all. But he talks rubbish anyway concerning life in general. Spot n forward, please read his last post : u have to aggree that he thinks he is a god! "just because they're lower calibre so will never experience the numbers" Who the f"%& is he to talk like that !? I'm quite sure he is lesser calibre than Gandhi but Gandhi would never have reached the numbers... This is non-sens, so your value only lies in how many $ you get? So a man who buys the right euromillion ticket worth more than u my poor Henry! Sad
Add your comment »If you think I'm equating "calibre" with amount of $ received you again show incredible ignorance. I'd much prefer the company of an attractive, public-school McKinsey consultant on £70k than some chip-on-shoulder inferiority-complex oik in cash trading on £200k.
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