Labour conference
2012
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Labour says banking change is necessary for an economy that "works for working people" |
Labour
leader Ed Miliband has said that if banks do not separate their retail and
investment arms, a future Labour government will "break them up".
"The
infection of retail banking by the culture of casino banking" had to be
tackled, Mr Miliband said, as the party met for its conference in Manchester.
Recommended
ring-fencing of retail from investment banking had been watered down by the
government, Labour said.
The
Treasury said it was "undertaking radical reform" of the banking
system.
The Vickers
report into banking, launched in the wake of the financial crisis, last year
recommended banks split into two parts to separate the High Street side from
the riskier investment side and cut their reliance on borrowed money.
The
coalition has already said that all of Sir John Vickers' recommendations will
be implemented by 2019.
But Mr
Miliband said a Labour administration would legislate if major changes were not
in place by the 2015 general election.
"Either
they can do it themselves - which frankly is not what has happened over the
past year - or the next Labour government will, by law, break up retail and
investment banks," he said.
"The
banks and the government can change direction and say that they are going to
implement the spirit and principle of Vickers to the full. That means the hard
ring-fence between retail and investment banking.
"We
need real separation, real culture change. Or we will legislate. If they don't
do it voluntarily, embrace the change Britain needs, then we are going to have
to do it by law."
Banks
'changed completely'
The Labour
Party conference slogan is "Rebuilding Britain".
A Labour
Party statement said: "We need to rebuild High Street banking so that they
back British businesses, savers can feel safe, and we get the long-term
investment needed to bring the new growth and jobs in our economy.
"That
means High Street banks must be properly separated from casino banking."
Recent
scandals over Libor interest rate-rigging and payment protection insurance
mis-selling had reinforced "how important it is to achieve real culture
change", Labour said.
But it went
on: "While the case for change has grown, the change we are seeing has
diminished.
"The
government has caved in to a concerted lobbying campaign to water down the
Vickers proposals for the ring-fencing of High Street banks from the casino
culture."
Responding
to Mr Miliband's comments, a Treasury spokesman said: "The government is
undertaking radical reform of the UK banking system to ensure that the mistakes
of the past aren't repeated, that the taxpayer is protected and that the banks
support the UK economy."
The British
Bankers' Association (BBA) said: "Since the onset of the global financial
crisis, banks and banking regulation have changed completely.
"The
UK's major banks have committed publicly to further change - to do whatever is
necessary to restore financial stability, to play their part in economic
recovery and to earn back the trust of their customers."
The BBA
said it was currently working with the government and regulators to implement
ring-fencing.
It added:
"The goal of everyone involved in this global banking debate is to create
a stronger, more reliable banking system with a customer-focused culture. The
only differences are in the remedies proposed."
On
Saturday, on the eve of his party's conference, Mr Miliband told a panel of
voters in Manchester that the country faced an "economic emergency".
Among
policies he has revealed so far are the replacement of Ofgem with an energy
regulator which has tougher powers to ensure prices are fair and a cap on
pension fund management fees.
He also
signalled that Labour was looking seriously at replacing student fees with a
graduate tax and wanted to go still further than the party's existing pledge to
reduce them to a maximum of £6,000 from the present £9,000.
Related Articles:
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Ed Miliband tells British banks: change now or be broken up
Ed Miliband dismisses banks' threat to abandon UK
Ed Miliband tells British banks: change now or be broken up
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