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AIG reveals $455 million in bonuses payments for 2008

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Associated Press

Beleaguered insurer American International Group Inc. said it had set aside and paid in part nearly $1.5 billion in retention and performance-related bonuses to its employees, more than previously disclosed.

The payments, $1 billion for retention purposes and more than $454 million that are performance-related, have been made as AIG received more than $180 billion from the federal government.

The New York-based company previously said it would pay about $1 billion in bonuses aimed at retaining employees through 2010.

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But in answers to questions from a lawmaker that were released this week, AIG said it also paid more than $454.7 million in previously undisclosed performance bonuses to employees in 2008.

AIG was heavily criticized for awarding $165 million in bonuses in March; the money is included in the $1 billion in retention bonuses. Employees returned some of the money.

AIG told Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) that the performance bonuses were paid out by operating units, across its operations in some 120 countries. Cummings has been one of AIG’s sharpest critics.

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The payments, on average, ranged from $4,994, to employees of its financial services business, to $51,026, for employees in the company’s asset management group.

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