Lies and secrecy do not fool investors

Lies and secrecy are the principal weapons being used by the Government to protect the developers and bankers of Anglo Irish Bank whose greed has brought the State to the brink of bankruptcy.

There’s nothing new in this, the State and its agencies have always acted to protect the interests of the corrupt with no regard whatsoever for the good of the country or its people.

Investors, however, are not as gullible and docile as the Irish people as witnessed by the dramatic drop in the shares of BOI and AIB yesterday. Hard nosed investors know very well that lies and secrecy mean only one thing, Anglo Irish is in a mess.

The politicians are also lying about BOI and AIB; both of these banks are also in a mess. It’s only a matter of time before their massive loans are transferred onto to shoulders of taxpayers while the bankers head off into the sunset with their golden handshakes.

Despite strong evidence of wrongdoing at Anglo Irish Bank the Minister for Finance has steadfastly refused to take any effective action against Sean Fitzpatrick and other bank executives.

“The Director of Corporate Enforcement is investigating all matters in relation to these matters in Anglo Irish Bank…and what has happened in the past will be investigated and dealt with by the authorities we already have in place and I don’t intend setting up new agencies to do that.”

(Prime Time).

The ODCE, like the so called Financial Regulator, is a joke. He has little power, is starved of resources and staff and it can be said with absolute certainty that he will never bring any of these bankers to account.

As I said previously, this is no accident. In real democracies these matters are dealt with immediately and effectively by the police and courts, people invariably go to jail.

In a corrupt state like Ireland, mechanisms like the powerless ODCE, the ultra secretive Financial Regulator, High Court inspectors and tribunals are specifically designed to sideline all investigations into never ending and ineffective dead ends.

It took a High Court inspector six years to investigate National Irish Bank. When he finally made his report revealing widespread theft and corruption at the bank it was decided to take no action. The whole point of the exercise was to ensure a long inquiry consigned the matter to history thus making it easy to let the offenders off.

The Jim Flavin DCC/Fyffes case is the same. Senior counsel Bill Shipsey was appointed by the High Court last July to investigate the case – Why? The Supreme Court had already found that Flavin committed fraud on the market.

He should have been arrested and charged but instead we see yet again the strategy of appointing a powerless official to carry out a long investigation at the end of which we can be absolutely certain nothing will be done.

Copy to:
Financial Regulator
ODCE

Fitzpatrick has nothing to fear

Judgement has been granted in favour of seven people who invested almost €13m with businessman Breifne O’Brien who misappropriated the funds in an alleged ‘Pyramid’ scheme.

The presiding Judge directed that the Garda Bureau of Fraud Investigation be given details of the court proceedings. The judge also granted a new injunction requiring Breifne O’Brien not to reduce his assets below €14.5m and denied a request that the case be heard in camera insisting instead that proceedings should be held in public.

O’Brien was told that he had lived a lie for fifteen years and that his investors were victims of a confidence trick which was not particularly sophisticated.

Compare this case to the Sean Fitzpatrick scandal at Anglo Irish Bank.

Fitzpatrick lived a lie for eight years as he moved his massive loan from bank to bank in a not very sophisticated scheme designed to deceive thousands of investors in his bank.

Because of his dishonesty thousands of shareholders have lost millions and the very stability of the banking system and the economy has been threatened.

So what happened to this chancer?

The Government and so called Financial Regulator immediately acted to defend Fitzpatrick saying that his actions, while disappointing, were not illegal. They are almost certainly wrong in this assessment.

They have further protected Fitzpatrick by keeping all details of his actions and the financial situation at Anglo Irish Bank a State secret. No action has been taken to freeze his assets and he is not under investigation by the police.

The completely discredited Financial Regulator is, allegedly, investigating Fitzpatrick. This, of course, is a joke. Even the most disinterested observer must now realise that the regulator acts only in the interests of chancers like Fitzpatrick. The interests of the country or its people do not enter the frame.

Sean Fitzpatrick is, as I write, in South Africa on a golfing holiday. He didn’t flee the country in panic and fear that he might be brought to account. Apparently, ‘Seanie’ doesn’t like the dark month of January and so heads off every year to sunnier climes to cheer himself up.

He has absolutely nothing to fear, he will be allowed to keep all his money; he will not have to pay back his loans; he will never be made to account for the thousands of lives he has devastated. Like every member of the Golden Circle Fitzpatrick is not subject to the laws of the land and enjoys total State protection no matter what he does.

Copy to:
Financial Regulator

Government – Trust us on Anglo Irish Bank

It seems that the Government had no choice but to nationalise Anglo Irish Bank but I tend to agree with Senator Ross’s suggestion that the strategy is designed to avoid awkward questions being asked at today’s EGM (Prime Time).

The taxpayer is being asked to accept liabilities of at least €25 billion while being kept completely in the dark about what’s really going on.

Serving their masters

The board of the Financial Regulator gathered today to lie through their collective teeth about how they dealt with Sean Fitzpatrick’s dirty little secrets. Outgoing boss Patrick Neary was asked just one question by the useless gaggle of politicians pretending that they have power to actually bring these people to account.

Chairman of the board, Jim Farrell, far from apologising to the Irish people instead expressed regret that Neary was going. Farrell then went on to tell us that changes had been made in the way business was being done, more changes were on the way, a more intense form of regulation is the new game in town apparently. Of course it’s all just waffle to keep the peasants happy until something else distracts their attention.

The useless politicians seemed to be very well informed on how bad things are at the Financial Regulator. Fianna Fail Senator Geraldine Feeney called the board a pack of liars, her colleague FF TD Joe Behan also claimed that somebody was lying over the infamous letter. This letter, by the way, was a denial by Anglo Irish Bank that anything was wrong and its ‘misplacement’ brought to a complete halt the entire investigative powers of the Financial Regulator – apparently.

Other politicians said the regulator was not fit for purpose and there was a general call for resignations. Of course, the unaccountable board told the useless politicians to take a hike, that they had no intention of resigning.

Dermot Quigley former Chairman of the Revenue Commissioners, another state agency that doesn’t believe in bothering bankers too much when it comes to the law, was in charge of the internal ‘investigation’.

Hilariously, he said the Irish regulatory system was admired all over the world for its effectiveness, perhaps he meant by the mafia? Our system is a principles based system which means trusting bankers to do the right thing with a minimum of supervision.

Here’s the brutal reality:

Ireland is a country where serious criminal activity is a common, integral and fully accepted part of the business and political systems.

The administration of the country is deliberately set up to cater for this criminal activity. It’s no accident that Oireachtas committees have no power whatsoever; it’s no accident that tribunals have no powers whatsoever; it’s no accident that agencies like the Financial Regulator operate under Soviet style secrecy laws, it’s no accident that agencies like the ODCE and are massively under-funded and under-staffed.

Politicians, civil servants and legal professionals all sat down at one time or another and made conscious decisions that that was the way things were going to be done.

That’s why we here at Public Inquiry can so easily predict the outcome of scandals. It was obvious from day one that Jim Flavin was never going to be brought to account and he never will be. Similarly, neither Sean Fitzpatrick nor the chancer Bertie Ahern will ever be brought to account.

Nothing will change at the Financial Regulator, a new regulator will be appointed and he will continue to do exactly what Patrick Neary did so faithfully for so many years – serve the interests of the financial institutions, even when they engage in criminal activity, at the expense of the Irish people and the good name of our country.

Copy to:
Financial Regulator
Joint Committee on Economic Regulatory Affairs

Neary: A pathetic and cowardly civil servant

We here at Public Inquiry have always treated the so called Financial Regulator with well deserved contempt. It’s an organisation that claims to work in the best interests of the consumer but in reality does no such thing.

The ‘Wild West’ financial sector of Ireland is, by far, the most corrupt in the Western world and yet not a single institution or individual has ever been investigated, never mind actually charged, by the police.

But the financial tsunami sweeping the globe has had the positive effect of stripping away all the bluff and bluster that covers the rot at the core of Irish financial regulation. The international community is beginning to see Ireland for what it really is, a corrupt banana republic pretending to be a modern democratic state.

Sean Fitzpatrick’s dirty little secret is just the latest example of how rotten the whole system really is and Neary’s ‘the dog ate my homework’ excuse for the debacle is a pathetic example of a cowardly civil servant rushing to protect his generous pension and massive golden handshake.

“So far as I am concerned, I was not advised of any such matters in early 2008 and there has been no oral, written or e-mail escalation of these issues to me or to the authority over the period until the matter was raised with me by the Minister on 10th December, 2008,” (Irish Times).

For good measure Neary throws in the by now standard missing letter/file and pressure of work excuses. The committee that ‘investigated’ the scandal made the usual mindless recommendations about reviewing staff requirements and examining loans to directors in more detail.

So, can the people of Ireland finally expect protection from the vermin that infest the financial sector when the new Financial Regulator is appointed? No, because the political system that created the financial regulatory system is itself corrupt and, as has become abundantly clear in recent times, does not act in the interest of the people.

Copy to:
Financial Regulator

Time to get out the pikes?

To date the Government has given the banks a €440 billion guarantee and a €10 billion actual payout. Irish taxpayer’s will never see a return on the €1.5 billion given to Anglo Irish Bank, it’s gone forever.

The Government guarantee for the greedy bankers has seriously damaged the country’s international credit rating and the billions already handed out with billions more to come will completely destroy any hope of an early recovery for the economy thus condemning the Irish people to many years of financial hardship and causing a great deal of damage to the country.

Despite all this the bankers continue to show complete and utter contempt for Irish citizens. All deals are done in complete secrecy; details are kept to an absolute minimum. Nobody has or will be fired.

Brian Lenihan, acting as the official toady for the bankers, makes public statements from time to time informing us of what his masters have decided. His (their) latest decree informed citizens, in no uncertain terms, that no bankers will suffer the indignity of losing their jobs.

“Bank of Ireland and AIB have boards. They have to reflect on their responsibilities, they have to reflect on the performance of their own management team. And of course they will reflect on them but it is not the function of the Government to chop off heads every second of the day. We have seen a number of people (heads) roll this week and I have no doubt that in all the financial institutions responsibility will be taken.”

In a sentence – The bankers are calling the shots; they are being allowed to risk the future of every Irish citizen in order to retain their jobs and ill gotten gains.

It is against this backdrop that Senator Shane Ross is attempting to organise a shareholder’s revolt. Aparently there are up to 300,000 small shareholders in the various Irish banks.

Ross wants them to attend the upcoming EGMs beginning with Anglo Irish Bank on January 16th next. He wants them to turn up ‘armed with their votes and questions’.

Votes and questions??? – Surely that should be pikes and muskets?

A corrupt nation in denial

The Financial Times has rightly described Ireland as a banana republic in response to the Anglo Irish Bank scandal. This is part of an ever increasing realisation by the international community that the administration of Ireland is, at every level, rotten to the core.

It is only within Ireland that the reality is denied. It is only within Ireland that a large majority of people including politicians, intellectuals, journalists and business people continue to pretend that Ireland is a normal, functional democracy like any other.

The financial tsunami that’s sweeping the globe is likely to strip away all such pretence and expose us for what we really are – a corrupt nation in denial.

The reaction to the Sean Fitzpatrick scandal and the banana republic editorial in the Financial Times is typical of such denial.

Brian Lenihan, Minister for Finance:

“I don’t accept that claim (Ireland is a banana republic), for one minute; very few countries have been left unscarred by the financial fall-out from the problems initially sparked by US sub-prime lending.
“There is nothing unique in what has happened in this country — and, indeed, we haven’t had all of the failings that have been demonstrated in some overseas banks.”

(Irish Independent, Dec 23).

Actually what happens in this country is unique. No other democracy in the world allows its bankers and other financial institutions to rob customers on a regular basis.

The corrupt and rotten business and political environment in Ireland is, largely, a creation of Lenihan’s party, Fianna Fail.

Shane Ross, Independent Senator:

“It’s a pretty stunning state of affairs.”

(Today with Pat Kenny, 19th Dec).

Actually it’s not stunning at all. This kind of ‘inappropriate’ behaviour has been going on since the foundation of the State. People like Senator Ross, unfortunately, have an amazing facility for getting outraged, forgetting and then getting outraged all over again when the next scandal breaks. He seems unable to join up the dots and see the reality that the Financial Times can see at a glance.

“What has happened here is a complete collapse of financial regulation…What has the Financial Regulator been doing since he became aware of Fitzpatrick’s loan last January?”

Wrong again Senator; there never was any financial regulation to collapse in the first place. Irish governments and regulatory authorities do not regulate but rather ‘facilitate’ the activities of financial institutions.

Last October, for the first time in the history of the State, an Irish financial institution was fined and that was only because it threatened the interests of other banks.

It’s likely that since last January the so called Financial Regulator has been trying to find a way of getting Anglo Irish and Sean Fitzpatrick off the hook. If it wasn’t for the collapse of the banking system Fitzpatrick would have been allowed to continue with his ‘inappropriate’ activities.

This is exactly how a ‘regulator’ behaves in a banana republic.

Gina Quin, CEO of Dublin Chamber of Commerce:

“I think it’s worth remembering that this wasn’t an illegal practice and you know business gets done between friends all of the time because we like to work with the people that we know and like and we can trust.

And trust is a hugely important feature of Irish business moving forward in the current climate. Trust and confidence are the absolute cornerstones of us pulling ourselves out of this current situation.

…the man has fallen on his sword, his fellow director is gone as well who was involved in one of the loans and we’ve got to move on…this is one small unfortunate incident and its not helping, we’ve got to move on.”

(Today with Pat Kenny, 19th Dec).

This is one small unfortunate incident”???

To be charitable to Ms. Quin, she’s young, ambitious and obviously completely ignorant of the rotten reality at the core of Irish public life. I hope that she manages to remain in her comfortable little bubble world interacting with people she likes and trusts.

Institute of Chartered Accountants in Ireland(ICAI):

The regulatory board of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in Ireland said it’s to look at the circumstances surrounding the director loan issue. It wants to know if any of its members was involved.

Recently, this organisation established an ‘independent’ regulatory board (CARB). Clearly, the ICAI sees regulation as a bit of a joke when we learn that they appointed Dr. Liam O’Reilly as chairman of the board of CARB.

During his career as chief executive officer of the Financial Regulator Mr. O’Reilly enthusiastically enforced policies that ensured no financial institution was ever brought to account for fraud or theft. His attitude is unlikely to have changed.

No accountant will be will be made to answer for the Anglo Irish Bank scandal.

Irish Association of Investments Managers:

The Irish Association of Investments Managers said it’s disappointed at events which have led to both Mr. Fitzpatrick’s resignations and that of the bank’s chief executive officer David Drumm. The association’s members manage 250 billion worth of investments and say they expect the highest level of transparency in dealings by directors of listed companies.

This joke organisation claims to ensure best standards throughout the investment industry. Two names – Jim Flavin, Sean Fitzpatrick.

Mary Hanafin, Minister for Social and Family Affairs:

When Hanafin was asked why couldn’t the Government make such loans illegal she spluttered

“Mmm…, Obviously, all sorts of arrangement and mmm…dealings that banks make, you know, and I think the regulator, the regulatory authority rather is actually looking to see what was behind that and the whole circumstances of it.”

(Saturday View, 20th Dec).

Hanafin went on to talk about the Fitzpatrick scandal as if she was a tourist from Mars and not part of the political establishment that created and supports rogue bankers.

Prof. Ray Kinsella, Director of the Centre for Insurance Studies at the Quinn Business School, UCD:

“This crisis has brought a generation to its knees…the impact on the very fine people working in the bank…the impact on Sean Fitzpatrick himself, I know it’s an unpopular thing to say but I’m uncomfortable with judgementalism and I don’t know all the facts but the impact on the Irish economy and financial system has been devastating.”

(Saturday View, 20th Dec).

The best that can be said of the professor is that he’s a bit of a header (See here). He once suggested that the Irish media should keep quiet about banking corruption as such talk could damage our international reputation. As I say, he’s a bit of a header.

Professor Niamh Brennan, Michael Mac Cormac Professor of Management, Director of Academic Centre For Corporate Governance, UCD:

Commentating on the failure of the Financial Regulator, Patrick Neary, to act on Fitzpatrick’s dodgy activities.

“I had thought it was a member of the staff that had made the discovery and hadn’t escalated to the Financial Regulator himself. But it appears that he knew and I find it absolutely extraordinary that he would have been part of those all night discussions in the Dept. of Finance and told nobody about this finding.”

(The Sunday Supplement, 21st Dec).

Professor Brennan is shocked because she, like many others in Ireland, labours under the illusion that the Regulator actually regulates, it does not. The Regulator, the Government and the banks are all in the same camp.

“What we need in Ireland is a robust system of regulation that protects the reputation of the country as a whole and which will be good for our citizens.”

As I have said, the Regulator, Government and the banks work closely together for the good of the banks and against the interests of the country and its people. The completely one sided deal done with the banks makes this fact crystal clear.

Unlike most commentators, including politicians, who immediately and without question accepted the regulator’s opinion that nothing illegal occurred, Professor Brennan believes that Fitzpatrick could be brought to account as follows.

Breach of fiduciary duties where a director puts his own personal interest ahead of the company.

Failing to keep accounting standards by not telling the truth in his financial statements.

Moving the loan was, in Professor Brennan’s opinion, illegal.

Fitzpatrick will never be brought to account for any wrong doing.

Ulick McEvaddy, businessman:

“I’ve seen this corporate madness if you like in a media frenzy to feed off any troubles that an Irish corporation would have.”

“So these people, Sean Fitzpatrick, Bill Barrett, these guys had a different philosophy in life and they to a great extent were, with Charles Haughey, another man pilloried in the media, the architects of this Celtic Tiger.”

(Marian Finucane Show, Sun 21st Dec).

My respect for McEvaddy completely evaporated on hearing this drivel. To blame the media for Fitzpatrick’s dodgy activities is bad enough but to defend the corrupt Haughey by claiming he was a victim of a media frenzy is to expose oneself as an ignorant fool of the worst kind.

David McWilliams, Economist and author:

For some time now McWilliams has been telling all and sundry what action needs to be taken in response to the collapse of the banks. But the Government have ignored his very sensible suggestions especially his insistence that the ‘financial delinquents’ who created the mess should all be sacked.

Responding to the dodgy deal done between the Government and the bankers McWilliams uses some colourful but accurate language.

“Recapitalisation is based on the economics of Noddyland.”

“Cronyism of the highest order.”

“Sends a signal to every foreign investor that Ireland is a banana republic.”

“Stroke politics” of Congolese proportions.”

(Irish Independent).

Unfortunately, McWilliams falls down in his analysis when he concludes that Brian Lenihan must be acting under very bad advice.

McWilliams, like so many other experts and commentators, persists in assuming that the Government and the Regulator are acting in the interest of the country when it is crystal clear that they are doing no such thing.

The Government, the Regulator and the banks are all on the same side, all working to an agenda that does not include the best interests of the people of Ireland.

Pat Cox, former president of the European Parliament:

I quote Mr. Cox extensively because his views are so disturbing.

Pat Cox is a highly intelligent and vastly experienced public figure. In addition to serving as President of the European Parliament he has served as an MEP, TD and broadcaster.

It is therefore deeply disturbing to witness him in full denial mode. Effectively, Cox is saying – Nothing illegal was done, Ireland is only a minor player when it comes to financial corruption and it’s just a case of some bad judgement and lax governance.

It’s difficult to believe he’s ignorant of the fact that Ireland is the only Western democracy that protects rather than prosecutes bankers who may be corrupt.

We here at Public Inquiry could quote hundreds of cases of political, financial and government corruption in support of the Financial Times accurate conclusion that Ireland is a banana republic.

Here’s what Cox had to say on the Fitzpatrick scandal.

“You asked the question at the very beginning; what about the comments in the papers about Ireland’s reputation?

If you look at the Tsunami of toxicity and greed that we have seen from Wall Street in all of the collapses and from the City of London, Ireland, I’m not relativising here (he is) but Ireland is really not king pin in this.

So those in the Financial Times editorial board or others who would cast a stone should cast them at glass houses closer to their headquarters at home. That’s the comparative point I wish to make.

Secondly, this week, we’re not discussing for example Mr. Madoff, one of the great guru’s of Wall Street who appears somehow or another by a corrupt scheme of pyramid selling to have maintained a system that finally has collapsed possibly with a debt of $50 billion.

So again, not to relativise, (he goes on to relativise) that’s real and that’s this week and it’s not in one Irish newspaper this weekend and a missing ingredient if we want comparative analysis.

I think the issue of what happened at home is an issue that touches loads of stories this week, it’s a question about people in authority, it’s a question about judgement, it’s a question about standards, it’s a question about transparency and it runs across so many stories in our papers today.

And the question about Sean Fitzpatrick is not one about legality and illegality to do with the bank giving loans. Under Irish company law it is very clear that up to ten per cent of the net assets of a business can be under law loaned to directors. Indeed, prior to earlier this decade up to a 100% could have been loaned.

So, the law is not the issue, the issue is the quality of governance, this is someone who has been the chief executive of one of the burgeoning banking institutions of this state and subsequently since he retired in 2004 the chairman.

And in that regard hiding the loan from the shareholders of his own bank, that’s the first grievous fault before we come to the public in some general prurient or other interest that they may have in this story.

It wasn’t leveling with shareholders and I only ask the question – Why not. It wasn’t illegal as has been said so why not tell it. So, there are people in the bank who made personal judgements not only one but several that it was ok in governance terms to hide this truth from their own shareholders maybe or not from their own auditors and they did it over consecutive years and it begs the question why.

Sure, not illegal but certainly well below the standards of good judgement and good authority and confidence is one of the missing ingredients in the global banking system today and in the Irish banking system and this is another heavy weight on those whose shoulders should bear the responsibility including our regulatory system.

The cosy capitalist bit or the Irish bit that I find quite disturbing is that those who have been invited to regulate appear themselves to be asleep at the wheel and so those who are there to look out for a stakeholders interest, whoever it may be, appear to have produced a less than acceptable performance and I find it really interesting that several of the newspapers today report our finance minister Brian Lenihan as not offering directly his confidence in our regulator saying this is a matter for the board and not for him.”

(Marian Finucane Show, Sun 21st Dec).

In conclusion:

The Financial Times is correct, Ireland is a banana republic. It is a corrupt state not just because of the extent of corruption throughout every level of society but more critically because of the complete failure of state agencies, including the body politic, to take effective measures to root out the disease.

This inaction has led to the State itself becoming a corrupt entity which in turn has created an environment where politicians, businessmen and many others in privileged and powerful positions can, with supreme and justified confidence, break the law with impunity.

This is the crucial difference between Ireland and other Western democracies. When corruption is uncovered in countries like America, England and France, for example, there is an immediate and robust response from well funded, professional and independent enforcement authorities. This does not happen in Ireland.

Ireland’s reputation will continue to be damaged for so long as politicians, journalists, intellectuals, business people and the bulk of ordinary Irish citizens continue to deny the reality of the situation.

Copy to:

Brian Lenihan, Minister for Finance
Shane Ross, Independent Senator
Gina Quin, CEO of Dublin Chamber of Commerce
Institute of Chartered Accountants in Ireland (ICAI)
Irish Association of Investments Managers (IAIM)
Mary Hanafin, Fianna Fail TD and Minister for Social and Family Affairs
Professor Kinsella, UCD
Professor Niamh Brennan, UCD
Ulick McEvaddy, businessman
David McWilliams, Economist and author
Pat Cox, former President of the European Parliament
Financial Regulator

Yet another banker caught out

Yet another banker has been caught out and forced to resign. Sean Fitzpatrick, chairman of Anglo Irish Bank, has resigned in a controversy over ‘inappropriate’ loans to directors involving sums of up to €87 million.

We don’t know yet if Fitzpatrick has done anything illegal, we can only be sure that if he has he will not be made accountable.

Writing in the Irish Times (22nd September 2005) Fitzpatrick is scathing in his criticism on over regulation and the attitude of media reporting on business matters. The article is worth reproducing in full.

Media should spare us the polemics and give us balanced business news

To maintain economic progress, we need fewer laws and a more positive attitude towards business and risk-taking, says Seán Fitzpatrick.

In order to consider now what we should be doing with the fruits of our economic success, we first need to understand what it is we have achieved over the last 15 years.

Let’s cast our minds back a number of years. Many of us will remember the mid-1970s to the mid-1980s. It’s easy, though, to forget the days of negative growth, high unemployment, high taxation, high interest rates, rampant emigration and balance of payment problems.

Ireland wasn’t exactly a great place to do business. We were conservative, flair was hardly in evidence and we lacked business confidence. The pace at which things were done was pedestrian, bureaucracy prevailed, but even worse, there was very little hope for our young and educated, who emigrated in their tens of thousands.

The last decade and a half or so has just blown that all away. It was as if, overnight, we discovered just how good we were. We were bright, well-educated, flexible, good-natured, creative and even hardworking. The Paddy stopped drinking G&Ts before the three-course, three-hour lunch and found Ballygowan, the bowl of soup and the hang sandwich.

We had ideas, and we had balls. We would put in whatever hours and whatever miles it required to take those ideas and turn them into business successes.

The brightest and the best of our school-leavers stopped automatically signing up for the professions.
Commerce faculties, business schools, and property qualifications became trendy and numerous. And all the time as we worked the scene and maximised the moment, the world watched in astonishment. That is no exaggeration.

The authorities on these matters – the economists, the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal and others – that had initially been sceptical, eventually came to marvel at what we were doing and achieving.

The economic boom has brought some trouble in its wake. It has led to excesses that have the potential to damage the very fabric of our society. On occasions, the confidence that fuelled much of the business dynamism turned to arrogance.

We’ve all seen the cases where the smile became a sneer, and the stride a swagger.

However, what must be acknowledged is that, for all the reservations, some of which are well founded, the Celtic Tiger has been a force for good in Ireland. It has allowed us stretch ourselves and express ourselves in a manner that was unthinkable in the business culture of the recent past.

And what was it that underpinned all of this success? Some trends were crucial, in my opinion:

The profound cultural shift in how we did our business and the pro-business environment that our Government championed.

More specifically, taxation was reduced, inward investment was greatly encouraged and many incentives were used to promote business and enterprise and property development.

The general environment was positive. The men and women who took advantage and who drove the economy onwards year on year were operating in a positive environment where risk-taking was applauded and success rewarded.

In his last budget, the current Minister for Finance referred to economic success as being nothing more than a means to an end – that unless it helped to create a better society it will have been wasted.

The national debate must go to the heart of what the Minister for Finance said. Yes, we must sustain our economic performance, but we must ensure that in another 10 years no such blights exist in the Ireland of 2015. Society as a whole must have benefited to a greater extent than it has to date. And that is the responsibility of us all.

I would like to develop another theme which is also about perspective – but in a different sense.

While our economy continues to outperform most of its peers and the immediate outlook remains very positive, there has been a slowdown in the rate of growth. This means we need to be very conscious of the overall environment for business.

Two things concern me:the move towards more and more regulation; the quite hostile approach towards business by elements in the media.

Maybe it is the start of old age kicking in. Maybe it represents the defensive instincts of a banking sector that feels a little bit hunted at the moment. But maybe, just maybe, the concern is genuinely motivated by a belief that the pronounced moves towards greater control and regulation could squeeze the life out of an economy that has thrived on intuition, imagination and a spirit of adventure.

There are those who appear to want to establish Ireland as the perfect model in corporate policing and regulation. For these people, regulation is paramount.

They want us to go further than a territory such as the US, where the scale of impropriety in business has been truly shocking. We’re moving towards regulatory and compliance barriers that are significantly more stringent than two of our most important trading partners.

But why? What has been done here over the past decade that demands such a reaction? Where is the line-up of failed companies with shareholders who’ve been ripped-off and left bemoaning the lack of due care and attention by feckless directors?

It is true that we’ve had some difficulties. My own industry of banking had the issue of Dirt to deal with and, as an industry, our actions were clearly wrong in the past. We failed to deal with the issues appropriately; we were wrong, and we have paid the price for our misjudgment.

However, what’s important in this context is that the issue of Dirt was capable of being dealt with under existing legislation and under existing procedures. We did not need any new powers.

Overall, we have done very well by Ireland and the Irish economy over the past 15 years. We can be proud of it and we can confidently state our case: we do not need more legislation. What we really need is fewer laws, but which are better and more stringently enforced.

The media has a huge influence in Ireland, and overall, I believe it has taken quite a negative view of Irish business. It remains the case that many in the business press seem always to focus on the negative.

Issues of compliance or general corporate conduct get coverage that is disproportionate to their importance, or the frequency with which they would arise.

This is important because business coverage influences the general public mood. It is a source of information for those from outside who are considering Ireland as a place to do business. It is absolutely correct that where serious wrong-doing has been uncovered it should be exposed.

This must be part of the function of an independent press. (The lack of it has been one of the long-running criticisms of the property media in Ireland and I don’t believe it has served the property sector well.)

So, it’s a question of balance. There are things that should be ventilated more, but what I see from where I am sitting, is a general acceptance by most of the media that business is dodgy or suspect and it needs to be highly regulated.

This theme is there in much of what I read and it needs to be challenged, because it undermines the fundamental that underpins economic growth.

And then there is the occasional descent into farce. RTÉ, which in fairness brings us morning and evening business coverage that is focused on just that – business – recently gave a platform to one of the thousands of financial advisers who trade in Ireland and allowed him sound off on the ills of our economy.

RTÉ chose to give a TV soapbox to Eddie Hobbs, someone who – completely unchecked – was allowed to go on a rant about our economy that targeted almost every stakeholder in that economic success that I referred to earlier. Why?

Everyone knows there have been overruns in infrastructural budgets. We all know that the taxation cocktail hits us particularly hard on certain goods and services and so on,but why, oh why, give this man four weeks of prime time television?

This is not good. I’d genuinely worry that much of the nonsense he peddled would gain common currency and that the wholly unbalanced Hobbsian perspective on Ireland of 2005 would fuel the anger of many of those who have failed to benefit from our economic success thus far.

This could also support a political agenda that is far removed from any of our long-established political parties.Were that to happen RTÉ should be held accountable, as the media generally must be, for the significant influence it has on the economic environment. This whole area needs attention.

To conclude, let me return to the need for us to make sure that we sustain the economic success of the past 15 years, but that in doing so we turn even more attention on the creation of a better and more equitable society in its wake.

That is the job of us all, and the media should prompt and prod us all – politicians, business people, the social partners – to ensure that this happens. Just spare us the polemics and the hyperbole and give us some balance.

Seán Fitzpatrick is chairman of Anglo Irish Bank. This is an edited version of his speech at The Irish Times Property Advertising Awards

© The Irish Times

The 'Rubber room' republic

A SENIOR An Post manager has been awarded a bonus of €11,000 on top of his €95,000 salary, even though he only worked for 11 weeks of last year.

The manager was assigned to An Post’s ‘resource centre’ in January 2007, an area known by post office employees as the “rubber room”, where staff that are “surplus” to the company’s needs are deployed.

Politicians are sending out thousands of Christmas card to constituents they don’t even know. It’s all part of the never ending vote buying machine known as Clientism. Each member of the Oireachtas is entitled to 21,000 pre paid envelopes every year. This year, the overall cost of the facility comes to €2.3 million.

Mary Harney said that we must all pull together in the coming year in the face of savage cuts in health. The ‘we’ she speaks of does not include highly paid and well protected politicians.

Two years ago the Equality Tribunal ordered the Department of Education to pay €12,000 to two students who were discriminated against in their Leaving Certificate.

The two students, who are dyslexic, had explanatory footnotes added to their exam certificates which could have put them at a serious disadvantage when applying for jobs.

The department said it was appealing the case to get clarity on the matter. The appeal cost €8 million – I’ll just repeat that – the appeal for ‘clarity’ cost €8 million.

The Government has decided that a certain number of 12 year old girls will have to die because the country cannot afford the €10 million needed for a cervical cancer scheme.

Former Taiwanese president Chen Shui-bian and his wife have been formally charged with corruption. Political corruption has yet to be recognised as a crime in Ireland.

Mr. Chen’s son in law has been jailed for seven years for insider trading. Insider trading has yet to be recognised as a crime in Ireland.

The former chairman of the Nasdaq stock market, Bernard Madoff, has been arrested and charged with securities fraud. He could face up to 20 years in prison. Corrupt businessmen in Ireland are never arrested, never charged, never go to jail.

Marc Dreier, a prominent New York plaintiffs’ lawyer and founder of Dreier LLP, has been charged by US federal prosecutors with securities and wire fraud in a case alleging a multimillion-dollar real-estate fraud involving hedge funds. Dreier could be facing a 10 year jail term.

If Mr. Dreier lived in Ireland it’s likely his case would be ‘looked after’ by his legal colleagues in the Law Society. If he was unlucky he might receive a mild reprimand.

The business to be in for a quick buck

Former Taoiseach (and professional chancer) Bertie Ahern was asked about falling shares in the banking sector (News at One, 2nd report 2nd item).

“I think anyone in shares has to look at the long run. If you’re trying to make a quick buck, it’s not the business to be in.”

That’s right Bertie – politics is the business for a quick buck.