After U.S taxpayers sacrificed billions  of dollars to bail out Wall Street, the rescued financial institutions  promised to cut executive bonuses and extravagant business expenses.  However, data shows that many of the same companies that we bailed out  earlier in the year, are planning to give out hefty bonuses in the first  few weeks of the New Year. As this story on CNN  Money.com explains, many  of the major banks in this country are showing no signs of reducing  their executive bonuses. 
Under pressure to prevent another meltdown,  Goldman Sachs (GS, Fortune 500) and Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500)  have been cutting back on cash bonuses and insisting on so-called clawbacks  -- arrangements that allow companies to reclaim past bonuses when there  is employee misconduct.
Yet for all their supposed reform-mindedness,  the banks show no sign of pulling the emergency brake on the great compensation  escalator.
A year after taxpayers saved the finance  industry from collapse, the big banks will hand out billions of dollars  in bonuses in the coming weeks -- at a time where unemployment tops  10% and many people are still losing their homes to foreclosures. To  say this rankles in some quarters is an understatement.
 
"There is a need to show restraint  considering the unusual circumstances of the past year or so,"  said Tim Smith, a senior vice president at socially responsible investment  firm Walden Asset Management in Boston. "That's what you're not  seeing right now."
