ONE of the UK's largest banks should be recapitalised and broken
up into smaller, regional outfits, the Archbishop of Canterbury said on Monday.
Archbishop Welby spoke at an event in Westminster on Monday
evening, organised by the Bible Society, on the question: "How do
we fix this mess? Long-term solutions to the financial crisis."
He said that banks that were distanced from local communities
did not have a "broad sense of promoting the well-being of a region
of which one is an integral part". He had concluded that "at least
part of the banking system should be local, not London-based, and
have its root in its own community. . .
"In simple terms, we need to recreate the local, and the easiest
way to do that . . . is to kill two birds with one stone by
recapitalising at least one of our major banks and breaking it up
into regional banks."
Archbishop Welby said that the "symptoms" of failures in the
financial markets had been "those of a failure of confidence. . .
Historically, the great failures in banking have led to very, very
long periods of recession at best, and I would argue that what
we're in at the moment is not a recession but essentially some kind
of depression. And it therefore takes something very, very major to
get us out of it in the same way as it took something very major to
get us into it."
To restore confidence in banking, it was important that
attention was paid to "professional standards," Archbishop Welby
said. "We cannot go on with banking being essentially something
that people drift into in the way that I drifted into being a group
treasurer."
Archbishop Welby also called for a "revolution in the aims of
the banks". They should not exist to "maximise the returns only for
their shareholders. . . They exist for the benefit of the whole of
society."
Archbishop Welby also spoke of the need for a culture of virtue
in banks. "Good culture requires a ruthless honesty and a deep
willingness to be made very uncomfortable indeed through listening
to things that one does not want to hear. The creation of virtue is
community-based; we correct each other. But good culture and
virtuous cultures only develop in communities of trust."
A Downing Street spokesman said on Tuesday that the Prime
Minister and the Chancellor "agreed with the Archbishop's analysis
that we have a slow and difficult recovery because of the problems
in the banking system", but stopped short of describing the
situation as a "depression."