Irish Financial Regulator – Still protecting the scumbags

Senator Shane Ross was writing about the Financial Regulator’s annual report last Sunday. The Senator continues to be astonished and staggered by the activities of our so called regulators.

Here are some of the things that staggered and astonished the Senator.

The chairman of the Financial Regulator, Jim Farrell, is a banker. Farrell was the boss of Citibank for many years. The publication of such details are the norm in accountable democracies but apparently rare in Ireland.

Such incestuous behaviour is not, however, unusual in Ireland. The bankers are on the regulators staff and it is quite common for regulators to end up as bankers after retirement. All part of the ‘old boy’s network’, old chap.

The Senator goes on to speak about the culture of secrecy at the Financial Regulator’s Press Office.

Their instincts for secrecy are ingrained. The watchdog’s press office must be a paranoiac’s paradise. Every question asked, however innocent, receives an evasive answer.

Tell me about it Senator. My efforts to get a straight answer from the Senior Press Officer last week was like trying to get blood from a stone.

And then there’s the ‘business travel’. Last year it came to €795,000 and this year will see a massive 22% increase to over €970,000. But, alas, as the Senator points out, taxpayer’s (peasants) are forbidden from knowing the details because the FR is protected by State secrecy laws.

In common with the rest of the media Senator Ross didn’t seem to notice that Farrell had, apparently, announced a major new policy to replace the principled based approach to financial regulation.

I rang the Department of Finance today to ask some questions about this alleged new policy and what happened, yes you’ve guessed. I received the same treatment that I received from the FR Press Office – waffle, stonewalling and riddles.

So just let me repeat – Neither the financial regulatory system nor the attitude of its staff has changed one iota. It is still the same secretive, arrogant system that has for many years protected the scumbags that infest the Irish financial sector.

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Senator Shane Ross

Financial Regulator's annual report – A dishonest whitewash

The Financial Regulator’s annual report, published last Tuesday, contains one very clear message that, depressingly, went completely unnoticed by the media.

That message is – Absolutely nothing has changed; the old regime is still in place; the old attitudes are still dominant; the interests of the people and the country will continue to take second place ahead of the interests of a ruthless and deeply corrupt financial sector.

Dodgy financial institutions will continue to enjoy full protection under a mountain of bureaucratic waffle and strict secrecy laws enthusiastically enforced by FR staff.

Jim Farrell is the public face of this disgraced and discredited Financial Regulatory regime. In an interview on RTE (5th report) he claimed that:

the way the country’s banks are now regulated is fundamentally and forever changed.

It is reasonable to assume from this statement that all is well at the Financial Regulator, that major reforms have been put in place which will protect consumers forever into the future and bring to account the corrupt vermin that have infested the Irish financial sector for decades.

In other words, it is reasonable to assume that Mr. Farrell has announced a virtual revolution in Irish regulatory methods and that from now on his organization will act in the interests of Ireland and its citizens rather than the interests of (dodgy) financial institutions.

The (revolutionary) measures announced by Mr. Farrell are as follows:

Extra staff with additional skills.

A more questioning and forensic approach to regulation.

Staff from the Financial Regulator are now on site in banks that are covered by the Government guarantee scheme. These people are full time and are monitoring the activities of banks.

The first two measures can be dismissed for the waffle that they are but the third measure is interesting.

My understanding of the presence of FR staff in the banks is that they are there in a temporary capacity as a result of the economic collapse and subsequent scandals.

I assumed, obviously wrongly, that once the crisis was over and banks were returned to private ownership that FR staff would also withdraw.

My understanding now, as a result of Mr. Farrell’s announcement, is that FR staff will become a permanent fixture on the staff not just of those banks under government guarantee but of all financial institutions to ensure that no such scandals could possibly recur.

To confirm this I contacted the Financial Regulator and spoke to the Senior Press Officer, Gill Forde.

Ms. Forde confirmed that it was official policy to have FR staff permanently on site in the covered institutions.

What about other financial institutions?

We are currently recruiting and enhancing our expertise in all of these areas and that’s the only detail I have for now.

My understanding from what Mr. Farrell said is that the banks covered by the Government guarantee are now going to have full time staff from the FR on a permanent basis.

Yes.

Even when they’re returned to private ownership?

He said the approach has changed and he was referring to principles based supervision.

What I’m inquiring about is the entire financial sector. Is it the policy of the FR to put their staff in all banks on a permanent basis?

The FR as you will be aware, there’s new legislation being brought forward by the Government forming a Central Bank Commission and I don’t have any more information.

I’m just going on exactly what Mr. Farrell said – The country’s banks are now regulated fundamentally and forever changed and one of the measures he has taken is to put people on site full time in those banks covered by the government guarantee.

Correct.

My question is – Is that a permanent policy, that FR staff will continue to monitor those banks forever and not just until the crisis is over?

I don’t have any information further than to say that that is our regulatory approach to supervising the banks.

So really what you’re saying is you don’t know.

I’m not saying that, I’m just saying that it’s a regulatory approach to supervising the banks.

Could you refer me to somebody who could answer the question?

That is our response.

I don’t understand your response; Mr. Farrell is saying that full time staff has been put on the banks

Exactly and that’s because the principles based approach no longer applies.

Are you saying that the placing of full time staff in the banks is a replacement for the principles based approach.

Yes, I am.

But it only applies to financial institutions under government guarantee and not to the entire financial sector?

The Regulator has been realigning with the new provisions and we are recruiting additional staff across the organization with the focus on risk, governance and enforcement

I tried to press the matter but Ms. Forde said she had to go and hung up.

Here’s my summary.

Mr. Farrell was being dishonest in suggesting that the temporary arrangement of placing FR staff in the banks was a major, industry wide and permanent reform.

(I say ‘temporary’ because nobody seriously believes that the banks would allow the Regulator to closely monitor their activities on a permanent basis)

In my opinion Mr. Farrell was just talking rubbish, just mouthing meaningless words to dishonestly convey the impression that substantial change had occurred that would, for the first time in Irish history, see genuine financial regulation.

Ms. Forde’s arrogant and dismissive reaction to my questions is exactly what I have come to expect from FR staff over the years. The attitude is still the same – Bureaucratic waffle, refusal to answer even the simplest questions and always the big stick of state secrecy laws.

Ms. Forde’s claim, for example, that the placement of FR staff in banks is a replacement for the principles based approach to regulating banks is, in my opinion, insulting waffle.

If such a major policy shift was in operation I wouldn’t be hearing it from a FR press officer, I wouldn’t even be hearing it from the chairman of the Financial Regulator on RTE News. I would be hearing it from a Government press conference chaired by the Minister for Finance as he announced to the world that Ireland had finally decided to take financial regulation seriously.

A much more disturbing aspect of this situation is the reaction or, more accurately, the non reaction of the media.

The publication of this year’s annual report by the Financial Regulator is arguably the most important event in Irish financial regulatory history.

It is the first annual report following the collapse of the economy which exposed the Financial Regulator as an incompetent toothless tiger unable or unwilling to reign in rogue elements in the banking sector.

This incompetence by the FR played a major role in the destruction of the economy and by extension is at least partly responsible for the massive financial and social damage to the people of Ireland.

Despite this, the media and in particular RTE effectively ignored the report and the fantasy (dishonest) claims made by Mr. Farrell.

This ignorance of what is really going on within the financial regulatory system and other so called regulatory agencies is a major contributing factor to the financial catastrophe now facing this country.

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Financial Regulator (Press Office)
RTE

Reports to save the country

The Tanaiste, Mary Coughlan, has warned a number of professions that the Government will not back down in its drive to increase competition in order to help save the economy (Irish Times).

Engineers, architects, the legal profession, dentists and others are, apparently, to be targeted by the Government because they have not yet felt the chill winds of economic reality. Ms. Coughlan has accused these professions of economic conceit.

So what action is the Tanaiste going to take against those guilty of economic conceit? Well, it seems that the Competition Authority has issued a number of reports over the past few years on the said professions and Ms. Coughlan is now going to submit a report – before the end of the year no less – outlining the progress achieved on the recommendations of those reports.

Asked about the McCarthy report on public service staffing expenditure Ms. Coughlan said she had instructed her department and think-tank Forfás to carry out an evaluation across all Government departments, assessing the impact of the report on employment and on the productive sector.

So, in summary, Ms. Coughlan is going to submit a report in response to a number of other reports and carry out an evaluation across all Government departments to assess the impact of the McCarthy report.

Who said that politicians are not showing vision and courageous leadership in this time of severe crisis?

The good news – We're better off than Iceland

The so called ‘great and good’ of Irish society (mostly those who have destroyed the country) are up in Donegal at the MacGill Summer School in Glenties issuing edicts of wisdom for the benefit of the masses.

Yesterday, the only pearl of wisdom they could come up with was that Ireland wasn’t in as bad a position as Iceland (RTE News, 8th report).

Farmers protest at loss of REPS 'income'

The REPS (Rural Environment Protection Scheme), scheme is designed to reward Farmers for carrying out their farming activities in an environmentally friendly manner and to bring about environmental improvement on existing farms (Department of Agriculture).

My understanding of this scheme is that farmers will be compensated/reimbursed for the extra costs in carrying out environmentally friendly projects on their farms. It’s not actually an income but a compensation to encourage environmental protection.

It seems, however, that farmers (and the Government) have been using it as an income. Here are some comments from a farmers protest last week in response to cuts in the scheme (RTE News, 4th report, 1st item).

By putting us out of the REP scheme we’re not going to get the money so the country is not going to receive the money.

It’s a bread and butter issue now, people don’t know where they’re going to get money to put food on the table and that’s the situation on the ground.

The school buses, the school books and the uniforms, they’re at their wits end. I’ve seen grown men crying where they have no income.

We’re not crying wolf this time I mean we’ve taken a 30% cut since last October. We don’t mind taking our fair share of the cuts; villages in rural Ireland will be decimated, this was putting money into local economies not just farmer’s pockets.

People power

Letter in today’s Irish Examiner.

I agree with Fergus Finlay (July 14) that political contempt for Dáil Éireann could lead to effective dictatorship.

I strongly disagree, however, with his conclusion that respect for our national parliament can only be restored by politicians.

It is clear that a majority of citizens have lost confidence in the body politic and therefore it is the people themselves who should act to restore respect for Dáil Éireann by bypassing the political system altogether.

Anthony Sheridan

Fianna Fail tells Green Party to take a hike – again

The Green Party made a pathetic attempt to boost their flagging credibility by abstaining on a vote in the Seanad on the Criminal Justice Amendment Bill.

Green Party Senator, Dan Boyle, who used to be a beacon of plain honest speaking, descended into the dark pit of Fianna Fail speak in an effort to cover up the party’s cowardice.

We’re unhappy about the current situation and we want it to change and the fact that we’re obliged to take a public action is a clear signal that we feel that things aren’t as they should be and they should be done differently and to presume that the Greens are to be taken for granted is not something we want to allow as a public perception and it’s not something we want to allow to be seen in terms of how our partners in government deal with us.

The brutal truth is that Dermot Ahern told the Greens to take a hike – and they did.

Time for the people to take back their parliament

Fergus Finlay has a very interesting piece in today’s Irish Examiner concerning the relevance of the Dail. He refers to RTEs political correspondent, David Davin Power, from last Sunday’s This Week programme (4th report). (The full report is worth a listen).

Our national parliament has become a nuisance to the real powers in the land. They – and I assume he means the Government and senior civil servants – have come to see the parliament as essentially an obstacle to the orderly running of government. That is why parliament is ignored most of the time and then treated with contempt at times like last week when important and controversial legislation was guillotined through the parliament before they were sent on their holidays.

Finaly goes on to make the following points.

I believe that’s tragic. Actually, it’s also hugely dangerous. The more respect for parliament is allowed to be corroded, the closer we all get to a slippery slope – and it’s the slippery slope, believe it or not, that leads to effective dictatorship.

And the truth is that until it does begin to take itself seriously, as the place where the interests of the people are truly represented, on a basis of conscience and as a place where other institutions are held to account on behalf of the people, then there is little enough reason for others to take parliament seriously.

He concludes;

Our parliament can be made to matter again. But only by its own members – and only if, once and for all, they start earning all our respect.

I strongly disagree with this last point, that only politicians can make our parliament matter again. Politicians long ago squandered any hope of regaining public respect.

The time has come, I believe, for the people to take back their own parliament from the incompetent, greedy and largely corrupt politicians.

The farce of Irish financial regulation continues

The farce that is financial regulation in Ireland continues. The latest joke concerns allegations that banks are overcharging customers who break out of a fixed-rate mortgage (Sunday Business Post).

(Big John Wayne) Lenihan apparently heard that banks were carrying out such dastardly acts and immediately ordered the Financial Regulator to investigate.

The FR, in keeping with its high standards of professionalism and concern for the best interests of consumers approached the banks and politely asked them if they were stealing from customers.

The banks, in keeping with their high standards of honesty, integrity and concern for the best interests of consumers, carried out an in depth investigation which, I believe, included asking the janitor, but found no evidence of wrong doing.

(Big John Wayne) Lenihan was pleased and in that endearing tongue twisting manner of his, he announced:

The regulator concluded, and has confirmed to my department, that its analysis indicates that the early redemption fee calculation in all cases appears to seek to recover costs and that lenders do not generally apply additional fees in the case of early redemption.

But wait – Big John spotted something amiss. The findings were based solely on material provided by the lending institutions themselves so in case there was the slightest risk that the legendary honesty of Irish financial institutions could be blemished in any way Big John Lenihan ordered the FR to carry out at least six on-site inspections.

A spokesperson for the financial institutions said that just because they were aware months ago of media allegations of wrong doing, were aware some commentators had expressed concern about possible wrong doing, were aware of polite questions by the Financial Regulator and were now aware that the FR was about to carry out on-site investigations with, of course, the usual prior notice of exact times and locations, did not mean that they would attempt to organise a cover up of any wrong doing.

A spokesperson for the Financial Regulator (under cover of darkness and wearing a hood) said that because of strict secrecy laws it was unable to confirm or deny reports of any wrong doing, was unable to confirm if (Big John Wayne) Lenihan was the Minister involved, was unable to confirm if it actually had powers to investigate banks and indeed was even unable to confirm if the entity commonly known as the Irish Financial Regulator really existed but the spokesperson did admit that most Irish citizens don’t really believe that it does.

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