- New criminal offence of 'corporate negligence' could punish financiers
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| Widespread fury: Sir Fred Goodwin, who presided over the collapse of RBS, escaped serious censure for his actions |
Greedy
bankers such as Sir Fred Goodwin could be jailed under tough new laws being
drawn up by George Osborne.
Growing
public outrage over the severe damage caused by the banking crisis has prompted
the Chancellor to prepare a new criminal offence of ‘corporate negligence’ to
punish reckless financiers.
The move
comes just days before the annual City bonus season, which is expected to bring
another round of bumper payouts despite the sluggish UK economy and families
suffering a historic squeeze on household finances.
All three
main parties are now competing to offer the most hardline policies on tackling
‘fat cats’, after their internal polling revealed the scale of voters’ fury at
the level of executive pay.
Under the
plan, being worked on behind the scenes at the Treasury, legislation would be
introduced to prosecute any boss of a ‘systemically important financial
institution’ whose actions had a significantly damaging effect on the wider
economy.
The plan
would mean that the chief executives of the big five banks: Bob Diamond at
Barclays, Antonio Horta-Osorio at Lloyds TSB, Stuart Gulliver at HSBC, Ana
Botin at Santander and Sir Fred’s successor at RBS, Stephen Hester – would all
be at risk of imprisonment if they
‘crashed’ the banks and damaged the economy through their actions.
The move
follows widespread fury that Sir Fred, who presided over the collapse of RBS,
escaped serious censure for his actions and even walked away with a
multi-million-pound pension deal.
Last night
a Treasury source confirmed that new legislation was being worked on, but
warned that a number of legal difficulties first had to be ironed out.
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The source
said that the Bank of England and City regulator the Financial Services
Authority (FSA) were being consulted to ensure that directors would face ‘appropriate
penalties’ if they behaved improperly.
The plan
will be set out in greater detail later this week by Tory MP Matthew Hancock,
Mr Osborne’s former chief of staff, who has regular discussions with the
Chancellor. Mr Hancock will make a keynote speech in which he will attack
current City regulations for ‘rewarding failure’ by incompetent bankers.
And he will
say that reckless bankers should be
jailed, in the same way as reckless doctors and drivers can already be
prosecuted.
| Hardline: George Osborne's (left) plan would mean that the chief executives of the big five banks would all be at risk of imprisonment |
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| Voters' fury: All three main parties are now competing to offer the most hardline policies on tackling City 'fat cats' |
He will
tell the Policy Exchange think-tank: ‘Those who put our big banks at risk . . .
should be held to account, just as with those who destroy property or endanger
the health of their fellow citizens.
‘Sir Fred
Goodwin broke one of Britain’s biggest banks, yet walked away with a huge
pension. I want to see a law which makes it possible to prosecute executives
for serious financial recklessness.
‘I would
hope such legislation would never have to be used. But the shadow of
prosecution will concentrate minds of those entrusted with institutions of
vital national importance. Our goal must be to make executives think harder
about the consequences of their actions, and change the culture of finance so
it is safer for us all.’
An FSA
report into the RBS fiasco, published last month, placed the blame for the
bank’s ill-judged acquisitions – which left it with unsustainable debts – on
Sir Fred’s ‘robust’ management style, but did not find grounds for disciplinary
action against him under existing rules.
The
Government’s £45.5 billion rescue in 2008 left the State owning more than 80
per cent of the bank. The taxpayer is
currently nursing a £25 billion loss on the deal while Sir Fred, nicknamed
‘Fred the Shred’, enjoys a £342,500-a-year persion.
FSA
chairman Adair Turner said in the report: ‘The fact that no individual has been
found legally responsible for the failure begs the question: if action cannot
be taken under existing rules, should not the rules be changed for the future?’
The FSA
says that ‘systemically important’ businesses are those whose collapse would
‘impair the provision of credit and financial services to the market with
significant negative consequences for the real economy’. Although the big five banks would be the main
target of the legislation, the definition means large investment banks or
insurance companies could also be caught.
The legal
test would be whether a ‘reasonable man’ would conclude that executives were
negligent or grossly negligent in their conduct. Mr Hancock said: ‘The aim
would be to strengthen existing corporate negligence provisions to deal
directly with negligence at the helm of a systemically important institution.’
Angela
Knight, chief executive of the British Bankers’ Association, said: ‘We would
need to carefully consider an issue as complex as this before making any
comment. But generally, decisions about executive pay and City regulation
should not be made on the hoof, and people should not be prosecuted for making a bad judgment.'
Jonathan
Pickworth, a corporate law expert at law firm Dechert, said: ‘The first problem
would be defining which institutions would be
covered. If you are talking about individual criminal liability, you
need to establish guilt beyond reasonable doubt. And when you are talking about
the possible deprivation of someone’s liberty, that would be a pretty drastic
step to take.’
The battle
to appear tough on executive pay intensified this weekend, with all three main
party leaders on the attack on ‘irresponsible capitalism’. David Cameron is
today expected to step up his rhetoric against high pay, declaring that he is
determined to tackle ‘rewards at the top’ that are not commensurate with success.
But behind the scenes he is at loggerheads with Lib Dem Business Secretary
Vince Cable’s support for a plan to give employees a seat on committees which
decide executives’ pay.
Labour also
attempted to seize the initiative yesterday, with Shadow business spokesman
Chuka Umunna calling for ‘responsible capitalism’ and Labour leader Ed
Miliband saying David Cameron could
either curb excessive boardroom salaries or ‘drag his feet, wring his hands and
fiddle at the margins like he has before on these issues’.
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