From Reuters.com:
 
Embattled insurer American International  Group (AIG.N) paid some $454 million in previously undisclosed performance  bonuses to employees for 2008, the company said in answers to questions  from a U.S. lawmaker that released on Tuesday.
AIG was widely criticized for paying  out some $165 million in retention bonuses after it received some $180  billion in government bailout aid. Some of the retention bonuses were  returned by employees after the firestorm of criticism.
 
The company told Representative Elijah  Cummings, a Maryland Democrat, the performance bonuses were paid out  by operating units, across the company's operations in some 120 countries.
 
Payments ranged from an average of $5,403  to employees of its property-casualty group, to $51,026 on average for  those in its asset management group.
The payments are in addition to an about  $120 million corporate bonus pool designated for holding company employees  and executives at subsidiary companies.
The performance bonus plans for the various  AIG units were set before the company teetered on the brink of bankruptcy,  forcing them to take government aid last September.
 
The payments are separate from $1 billion  in retention payments to entice employees to stay with the company.
 
