Tuesday 23 July 2013

Archbishop of Canterbury warns of 'lynch mob' out to blame bankers

But Justin Welby also says it is unacceptable that top executives deliberately made sure they did not know what was going on so they could plead ignorance
The archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, has described blaming individuals for the banking crisis as "lynch mobbish". But the archbishop, a member of the parliamentary commission on banking standards, also said top bankers had avoided responsibility by ensuring they did not know what was going on in their banks.
"Certainly one of the trends that has been very unfortunate, to put it mildly, is that in some financial services companies there was a clear policy of not telling the top people. They made sure they weren't told things, because then they could plead ignorance, and that's just unacceptable.
"But this business of somehow saying that one individual bears the whole blame as opposed to simply the accountability – it feels lynch mobbish."
The archbishop was speaking to the bishop of Liverpool for a BBC Radio 4 documentary to be broadcast on Monday night, in his first public comments on the banking industry since the parliamentary commission published its damning report in June. The cross-party commission, led by Conservative MP Andrew Tyrie, made more than 80 recommendations, from introducing a new criminal offence to make it easier to send reckless bankers to jail to getting more women on the trading floor.
Justin Welby worked as an oil executive before he became a priestIt also accused senior bankers of evading their responsibilities by closing their eyes to what was happening on the front line.
Welby told the BBC he felt some sympathy for banking executives and admitted he was not sure he would have behaved differently had he been in their place. Welby also described the tensions between his faith and the business world when he worked as an oil executive, before taking orders.
"What I remember is the sense that the culture and values of the financial world enveloped you and began to shape one into a new ethical shape," he said. "You were aware that you were struggling with this and often rather frightened by what was going on."
The bishop of Liverpool also spoke to Antony Jenkins, chief executive of Barclays, who said he was not convinced that a criminal offence of negligence within the financial services industry would solve the problem.
"The biggest driver of change in the behaviours of banks has to come from within the banks themselves – they have to come to a realisation that they will be better businesses commercially and ethically if they change their behaviour."
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
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