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1980s was big for finance. We've all seen Wall Street and Trading Places.
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It was then the banker bonuses began their heady climb. Deregulation allowed commercial banks to expand into stock and bond trading, boosting profits.
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Bankers reaped bonuses in line with the huge profits they made.
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Those bonuses were then cast as one of the root causes of the 2008 global crisis, the heart of an incentive system that rewarded greed and risk.
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Bonuses shrank as banks adjusted to the post-bailout reality of lower profits. Many banks changed their pay structure to reward long-term success.
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But regulators want more, specifically power to claw back cash when risky investments go sour or when there's foul play.
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As the EU rolls out first law limiting payouts, bonuses of more than twice fix salaries of band to bait rages of
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whether regulators should interfere with compensation. But has banker bashing gone on too long?
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Those in the profession argued the caps may just drive base salaries up and leave places like London as disadvantaged to its peers in New York and Tokyo.