Davos 2010: Bankers hit out at regulation plans
Barney Frank
Barney Frank was a rare voice arguing for more regulation
The World Economic Forum in Davos has begun with bankers and regulators clashing on plans for more regulation.
"We need good regulation, better regulation but not more regulation,"
Lord Levene, chairman of the insurance market Lloyd's of London said.
Barclays head Bob Diamond also suggested that more rules would drive banks out of London and New York.
The debate comes after US President Barack Obama proposed breaking up banks that are "too big to fail".
"We need a strong financial centre in New York and a strong financial
centre in London," said Mr Diamond. "This is a time when isolated
actions in the UK and US are not constructive."
He added: "I have seen no evidence ... to suggest that shrinking banks and making banks smaller and narrower is the answer."
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Mr Obama's proposals, which need congressional approval, would prevent
banks or financial institutions that own banks from owning hedge funds
and bar them from proprietary trading - investing to make a profit for
themselves rather than on behalf of customers.
Treasury minister Lord Myners, shadow chancellor George Osborne and the
head of the Bank of England, Mervyn King, have endorsed those plans.
'Rules are good'
Lord Levene told attendees that more
regulation in the US and UK may drive banks and businesses to emerging
financial centres - such as Singapore, Shanghai and Zurich.
He pointed to the huge influx of business into London after the US
passed the Sarbanes-Oxley act following the Enron and Worldcom
scandals. The move, aimed at holding company directors to account, led
to higher costs and an increased threat of legal action for firms
listed in New York, he said.
That led to record listings on the the London Stock Exchange in the years leading to the financial crisis.
"In the City of London, we want to build statues to Mr Sarbanes and Mr Oxley for all the business they gave us," he joked.
But Barney Frank, the chairman of the House Financial Services
Committee, who sat on the same panel titled "The Next Global Crisis,"
disagreed that financial institutions should be left to make their own
reforms.
"Rules are a good idea," he said.
He acknowledged the effects of the Sarbanes-Oxley act on US companies,
but said that it was a huge step to avoid future crises that regulators
in London and Washington now agreed on more regulation.
"You can't play mommy and daddy against each other now," Mr Frank said.
Meanwhile, the deputy head of the Chinese central bank said that weak growth was the biggest threat to the global economy.
"The real risk for the global economy is weak and volatile growth," said Zhu Min, deputy governor of the People's Bank of China.
"Even by the end of 2010, US GDP will be at the same levels as it was in 2007. Three years gone for free, economically."
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