Capitalism is doomed if ethics vanish, says Bank of England
governor
Mark Carney issues
strong critique of City behaviour and warns of growing sense that basic social
contract is breaking down
Angela
Monaghan
The
Guardian, Tuesday 27 May 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/business/2014/may/27/capitalism-critique-bank-of-england-carney
Capitalism
is at risk of destroying itself unless bankers realise they have an obligation
to create a fairer society, the Bank of England governor has warned.
Mark Carney
said bankers had operated a "heads-I-win-tails-you-lose" system. He
questioned whether traders met ethical standards and said that those who failed
to meet high professional standards should face ostracism.
Speaking at
a City conference, the Bank's governor warned that there was a growing sense
that the basic social contract at the heart of capitalism was breaking down
amid rising inequality. "We simply cannot take the capitalist system,
which produces such plenty and so many solutions, for granted. Prosperity
requires not just investment in economic capital, but investment in social
capital."
In a
strongly worded critique of City behaviour in the run-up to the financial
crisis, Carney said market radicalism and light-touch regulation had eroded
fair capitalism, while scandals such as the rigging of Libor markets had
undermined trust in the financial system.
"Just
as any revolution eats its children, unchecked market fundamentalism can devour
the social capital essential for the long-term dynamism of capitalism itself.
To counteract this tendency, individuals and their firms must have a sense of
their responsibilities for the broader system."
Carney told
delegates at a conference on inclusive capitalism in London – which was
attended by the former US president Bill Clinton – that big banks had operated
in a "heads-I-win-tails-you-lose bubble", with personal gain hotly
pursued by bankers.
"All
ideologies are prone to extremes. Capitalism loses its sense of moderation when
the belief in the power of the market enters the realm of faith. In the decades
prior to the crisis such radicalism came to dominate economic ideas and became
a pattern of social behaviour."
The
governor added that policymakers and regulators in the UK and
internationally were addressing ways of making the system fairer and of
limiting the likelihood of a future financial crisis through reforms.
But he
stressed that there was a greater onus on banks and also bankers to take
responsibility. Referring to changes afoot, after the scandals in fixed income,
currency and commodity markets, he said: "Such changes are vital but they
cannot anticipate every contingency or discipline every miscreant.
"The
scandals highlight a malaise in corners of finance that must be remedied. Many
banks have rightly developed codes of ethics or business principles, but have
all their traders absorbed their meaning?
"Consideration
should be given to developing principles of fair markets, codes of conduct for
specific markets, and even regulatory obligations within this framework. There
should be clear consequences including professional ostracism for failing to
meet these standards."
He said G20
leaders and international regulators on the Financial Stability Board were
working to resolve the issue of financial institutions that were "too big
to fail", a problem which left taxpayers with a huge bill at the onset of
the crisis in 2008.
"This
is the year to complete that job," he said. "Perhaps the most severe
blow to public trust was the revelation that there were scores of
too-big-to-fail institutions operating at the heart of finance. Bankers made
enormous sums in the run-up to the crisis and were often well compensated after
it hit. In turn, taxpayers picked up the tab for their failures."
Carney said
that ultra loose monetary in the UK had helped to prevent a lost
generation of long-term unemployed, and improved long-term social mobility
prospects.
He added
new powers and responsibility handed to the Bank by George Osborne should help
to reduce incidence of financial crises.
He said one
of the lessons of the crisis was that compensation schemes that delivered large
bonuses for short-term returns encouraged individuals to take on too much
long-term risk. "In short, the present was overvalued and the future
heavily discounted."
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