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Video: Will an apology enable banks to move on?
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Posted by
apesphere on 07 Oct 2009
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| Image courtesy World Economic Forum via Flickr |
Stephen Green, Chairman of HSBC and author of a new book "Good Value", has said in a BBC interview that he feels banks owe the public an apology.
This makes quite a change from the tales of "back to business as usual" emanating from Wall Street and London's Canary Wharf, and much more appropriate to the author of a book with the subtitle "Reflections on Money, Morality and an Uncertain World". I wonder though whether an apology is enough. Here's a reminder from my earlier post about what we can now view as:
the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression: an increase in the number of people around the world in chronic hunger and poverty by over 100 million, to 1.02 billion; between 200,000 and 400,000 more babies could die each year between now and 2015 if the crisis persists; an increase in global unemployment by between 29 million and 59 million people; one in eight US mortgage borrowers is behind on mortgage payments or facing foreclosure at the end of the second quarter 2009; pensioners relying on developed country stock market returns for their retirement incomes have seen their savings fall by 45%.
The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission in the US holds out the promise of going beyond apologies and the inevitable return to customary way of doing business. It offers a public space in which public but impotent anger can be channeled into better understanding and a focussed demand for real change, generating and sustaining in its turn the political will for the necessary reforms.
London could do with a comparable public inquiry of its own.
- Topics: Leadership & Managing People, apology, asia pacific, bank governance, bankers, bankers pay, banking, banking regulation, banks, commercial banks, communities, economic crisis, ethical banking, europe, financial crisis, financial crisis inquiry commission, global economic crisis, hsbc, investment banking, investment banks, investors, mortgage crisis, stephen green (chairman of ), truth and reconciliation commission, united kingdom
Andrew Newton 

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