MEP calls
on European commission to take UK to court for allowing banks to 'blatantly'
sidestep EU rules limiting bonuses
The Guardian, Jennifer Rankin and Jill Treanor, Tuesday 4 March 2014
The UK government should be sued for allowing banks to sidestep new bonus caps, says one MEP. Photograph: Alamy |
One of the
architects of the EU's cap on bankers' bonuses has called for the UK government
to be sued for allowing banks to sidestep the new rules as two more high street
banks were preparing to hand their bosses up to £1m in extra pay to avoid the
clampdown.
Philippe
Lamberts, the Belgian Green MEP who helped devise the restrictions, said it was
clear the UK was failing to implement EU law and accused the coalition of
having no interest in halting "absurd remuneration packages". He
urged the European commission to take the UK to court for allowing bankers to
bend the rules which limit bonuses to 100% of salary or 200% if shareholders approve.
His plea
came as Barclays and the bailed-out Lloyds Banking Group are expected to reveal
they are handing their bosses Antony Jenkins and António Horta-Osório new share
awards, on top of their salaries, to prevent their overall pay falling as a
result of the cap. The new pay deals could be announced as early as Wednesday.
Their
disclosures will follow HSBC's move to pay its chief executive, Stuart
Gulliver, an additional £32,000 a week in allowances on top of his £1.2msalary, and after Virgin Money raised the salary of its boss, Jayne-Anne
Gadhia, to £637,000 from £550,000 as a result of the restriction. Royal Bank of
Scotland, which is 81% owned by the taxpayer and paid out £567m in bonuses after making an £8bn loss, is yet to announce its response to the bonus cap.
However, it is considering asking its shareholders for permission to pay out
bonuses worth 200% of salary. Standard Chartered reports its results on
Wednesday when it will also face questions about how it intends to tackle the
cap.
"What
we are witnessing now is an attempt by the major banks, with the support of the
British government, to circumvent the rules and that is to compensate what we
did on terms of structure, by just raising the fixed rate of
remuneration," said Lamberts.
The
European commissioner for the single market, Michel Barnier, should take legal
action against the UK, he said. "I will see Barnier soon and I will
encourage him to do that. I know that the commission has already asked for
specific information from the British government. So I will certainly take a
hard look at that."
The
chancellor, George Osborne, is challenging the bonus cap in the EU's highest court because it will push up the amount of fixed pay but Lamberts said he was
not worried about losing because the UK government argument that the caps are
illegal was based on "fragile" logic.
"People
like David Cameron and George Osborne are part of the same club. These are
people who are really out of touch with reality. They are part of the same
class, so I think it is natural for them to defend their interests."
The MEP
insisted that the EU cap on bankers' bonuses had not failed, because
"disguised remuneration" was now out in the open. Barnier on Tuesday
published details of which bank staff would be affected by the cap and said
that "some banks are doing their utmost to circumvent remuneration rules…
The commission will remain vigilant to ensure that new rules are applied in
full."
The
European commission said it was too early to say if any country was in breach
of the capital requirements directive, known as CRD IV, which includes the
bonus cap.
Lamberts,
however, said the UK government was in breach of the directive:"To me it
is clear that it doesn't act. And I think the best example of that is when a
bank is 80% owned by the British government and they are not acting. To me they
have no appetite for really going after absurd remuneration packages."
The Bank of
England governor, Mark Carney, is also opposed to the restrictions and has
written to the Treasury select committee to promise a new consultation this
month on tougher measures to claw back bonuses and to extend the deferral
period for bonuses from three to five years, in line with recommendations by
last year's parliamentary commission on banking standards.
Carney
warned the select committee - which is overseeing implementation of the
commission's recommendations - that its proposal to claw back pension rights
from individuals at banks in receipt of taxpayer support could be in breach of
European human rights legislation and the UK pensions act.
Lloyds has
already announced that Horta-Osório is receiving a £1.7m bonus for 2013 and is
likely to reveal a payout from a long-term incentive plan of around £2.9m. It
may also disclose whether bonuses are being clawed back from previous
management for new provisions for PPI mis-selling and last year's £28m fine for bonus structures which encouraged mis-selling.
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