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How one man at Barclays Capital was paid more in one year than the total earned by the bank's executive board ... Jenkins, 51, is not a member of Barclays' executive board; he is believed to receive a percentage of the profits generated by his division, which is the most profitable part of the investment bank by a considerable margin. Indeed, such is the importance of his division that, in an unprecedented agreement, each time it completes a deal that saves money for Barclays, the bank pays a fee to its investment banking subsidiary. ... Jenkins, nicknamed Dodger, joined Barclays as a graduate trainee in 1978, five years after representing Scotland in the 400 metres at the British International Games at Crystal Palace. He came third. Alan Pascoe came first. ... Jenkins' division devises complex structures that are designed to improve the profitability of transaction carried out by other parts of the bank. While the transactions can take many forms, their structures have one common aim - to reduce the tax liability of clients.
...
Jenkins, 51, is not a member of Barclays' executive board; he is believed to receive a percentage of the profits generated by his division, which is the most profitable part of the investment bank by a considerable margin.
Indeed, such is the importance of his division that, in an unprecedented agreement, each time it completes a deal that saves money for Barclays, the bank pays a fee to its investment banking subsidiary.
Jenkins, nicknamed Dodger, joined Barclays as a graduate trainee in 1978, five years after representing Scotland in the 400 metres at the British International Games at Crystal Palace. He came third. Alan Pascoe came first.
Jenkins' division devises complex structures that are designed to improve the profitability of transaction carried out by other parts of the bank.
While the transactions can take many forms, their structures have one common aim - to reduce the tax liability of clients.
But this
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/92f7ee6a-a765-11db-83e4-0000779e2340.html
is more worrying. Probably worth a Diary on its own. "The future is already here -- it's just not very evenly distributed" William Gibson
the rich work hard for tax dodges, no question. but that's a matter for better government.
The tax system is as unfair as the rest of the system: it's two sides of the same coin, and rooted in a culture of selfishness and greed.
But that, as they say, is another story. "The future is already here -- it's just not very evenly distributed" William Gibson
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