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Banks get £46bn in “too-big-to-fail” subsidy

As the Vickers Commission prepares to launch their final report on Monday 12 September 2011, analysis by nef (the new economics foundation) quantifies the ‘too-big-too-fail’ subsidy for each of Britain’s ‘big five’ banks for the first time, and argues that the Commission’s proposals are too narrow to be effective.

The analysis in the report, Quid Pro Quo, documents how banks fundamentally differ from other companies and how they profit from their unique status. As splits emerge in the Coalition Government over the recommendations of the Independent Commission on Banking (also known as the Vickers Commission), the report argues that proposals on ‘ring-fencing’ and competition have failed to tackle fundamental structural issues.

As the report shows, the British public didn’t just pay when we bailed out the banks. New calculations show the ongoing cost to the British economy of supporting our biggest banks. Updating the Bank of England’s calculations with 2010 figures, and calculating the subsidy for individual banks for the first time, shows that:

  • Although the ‘too-big-to-fail’ subsidy has fallen from its mid-2009 peak, the ‘Big Five’ UK banks still enjoyed a combined subsidy of £46 billion in 2010;
  • Last year, Barclays enjoyed an indirect subsidy of £10 billion from the British public;
  • Lloyds, RBS, HSBC and Nationwide also enjoyed subsidies of £15bn, £13bn, £7bn and £1bn respectively;
  • The ‘too-big-to-fail’ subsidy for the UK’s largest four banks is 62% higher than the equivalent subsidy in Germany, despite the fact that the German economy is significantly larger, which shows that there is nothing inevitable about the level of subsidy.

The ‘too-big-to-fail’ subsidy refers to the fact that banks with government guarantees are able to access finance at a significantly lower rate than would otherwise be possible. No other industry enjoys such a subsidy. The Vickers Commission’s primary prescription for tackling these subsidies is to ring-fence retail banking from investment banking activities. Yet the Commission itself admits that ring-fencing will only reduce and not eliminate the ‘too-big-to-fail’ subsidy.

It isn’t the only support the banks receive from the public. Taxpayers are now paying £5 billion per year in ongoing finance charges on funds used to bail-out banks.

Tony Greenham, head of banking and finance at nef (the new economics foundation) said: “Banks are still in the casino with our cash and the tables are fixed in their favour. The quid pro quo for the banks’ unique position, and the unique privileges they enjoy, is fair, strong and effective regulation and a fair financial contribution to the British public. The longer Government dodges reform, the longer the British public and the British economy will continue to pay for the banks’ failure. The time for hesitation is over.”

Additional benefits enjoyed by the banks but not by other industries include:

  • Subsidised deposit insurance. The British public provided £19 billion for the UK’s deposit guarantee facility during the financial crisis.
  • Access to the Bank of England as lender-of-last-resort. There is no such lender of last resort for other industries.
  • Privatised gains and socialised losses. Corporate tax cuts are likely to cancel out revenue brought in by the bank levy, and financial services are excluded from VAT.

The size of the benefits extended to banks may well exceed their tax payments. If the Government is to avoid subsidising the profits and pay of major banks and their staff it needs to claw-back the subsidies by ensuring the banking industry pays its fair share in tax.

David Hillman, spokesperson for the Robin Hood Tax campaign, said:

Being ‘too-big-to fail’ allows banks to put billions on their credit cards with their interest payments subsidised by the taxpayer – when things go wrong the public pay off the balance. Rather than invest this subsidy productively, banks use it to sustain sky-high pay packets and their casino-banking business model.

What about the millions of ordinary people still feeling the effects of a financial crisis they did nothing to cause? Protecting the welfare state for bankers is being put ahead of the welfare of wider society.”

With regard to competition, the Commission’s partial diagnosis of the unique nature of banking has led it to propose ineffective remedies. The creation of one or two new big banks by selling off additional branches of Lloyds largely misses the point. The complexity of financial products, obscure pricing, the difficulties faced by customers in choosing the most beneficial products and the barriers to new and smaller banks entering the market all allow a small number of big banks to exploit their customers.

Our banks have been given too much power and bold action must be taken. Much greater emphasis should be placed on transparency, financial education and smaller and simpler retail banks. Consumers need full information on the products that they are being sold so that they can make informed decisions.

Lydia Prieg, nef’s finance and business researcher says:

Banking is indispensible to our economy and so should be looked upon as a public utility, like water or energy, rather than as a regular industry. Successive governments have failed to do this, and have instead given the banks an inappropriate level of freedom, vast public support and have let them profit at the expense of the British public as both taxpayers and customers.”

One Comment

  1. Drieu says:

    Good job, excellent article!

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