06 September 2009

 

Bankers pay at G20

The FT Lex column (on ft.com) had an article about the G20s efforts to develop international financial regulation. This can be viewed at http://www.ft.com/cms/s/3/e0c5d822-9890-11de-807a-00144feabdc0.html 9Subscription may be required).

In response I wrote to the editor of the FT (published 8th Dec 2009, at least on ft.com) as follows:

Dear Sir,
The Lex column is quite wrong to describe the G20's focus on bankers' pay as "populist but often tangential". Bankers' behaviour is driven by pay, and so bankers' pay has to be absolutely central to regulation of behaviour in the financial sector. It is essential that the incentives that arise from pay lead to constructive, value creating behaviours and not to behaviours that undermine the system.
As Lex points out that, "the architects of boomtime credit innovations are returning to their desks, finding new ways to tinker with balance sheets and carve through rules that are still being developed. The regulated are already moving ahead of their minders." Such behaviour could all too easily send us back into crisis, and yet the behaviour arises because of the incentives in bankers pay.
Removing incentives for destructive behaviour from bankers pay is an essential first step before any other new regulation has a chance of succeeding.
Yours faithfully,
The Revd. Patrick Gerard

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