Twitchy Bankers Promised To Become Ethical in 2011 What Happened

Twitchy Bankers Promised To Become Ethical in 2011 What Happened

Bankers Promised to Implement ‘Ethical Professionalism’ in 2011. What Happened?

bankers promised new beginnings for banking and finance 2011 It’s nearly 13 years now. How’s the vow going?

After the 2008 crash, an enraged public made our nervous/defensive/complicit political establishment loudly promise answers and change. You might say that’s hardly surprising, considering the damage inflicted on the UK economy. Is what bankers promised now a reality for 2024? Did faux remorse evaporate? Does hypocrisy rumble on?

Remorseful bankers promised change

Ethical Professionalism trumps all - a statement of commitment

By 2011, with abject contrition, The City, Banking, and Financial Institutions held their hands up, admitting with huge contrition over many pages, paragraphs and statements that the game was up. To paraphrase the verbiage:

  • we are often crooked,
  • we collude with other crooked people in our sector
  • we regularly look the other way, and
  • we will change, sort this out with eternal rigour and never do it again

They published  The Report on The Lord Mayor’s Conference on Trust and Values (November 2011). They affirmed an earnest intention to face failures and bring about a brand-spanking-new and ethical culture in the financial sector. In other words, from then on, bankers promised the financial sector would live, breathe and demonstrate Ethical Professionalism. From another point of view… aye, right.

Promises, promises… really? Now it’s 2024

Bankers promised with statements like:

“…our perspective and actions will be guided by a new moral code, appreciation for the consequences of our actions, and a sincere belief in collective responsibility and shared success.” Really?

One may wonder what the old moral code lacked. The term Ethical Professionalism summarised the promise of new virtuous relationships throughout Banking, the Financial Sector and their dealings in all situations.

Our financiers self-flagellated as they took up their chosen gauntlet, intending to become demonstrably ‘fair, honest and trustworthy‘  — some admission. Their challenge was human, procedural, auditable and institutional–everything. Now, 13 years on, how is the promise doing? 

A heartfelt commitment

In 2011, with one voice, top Finance and Banking leaders embraced cultural change with a businesslike, almost evangelical zeal. An observer might have wondered how close expensively pinstriped buttocks smouldered from proximity to a glowing (hypocritical?) Government barbecue.

Recently, I shared their term, Ethical Professionalism, with a top manager I know. After suggesting the term was unclear, his choice of fruity words and cynical laughter still rings in my ears… really? A signal, perhaps, of the scale of the task awaiting the eager banking and finance climbers on their transformational North Face of the Eiger for sure.

Good intent never sounded so good

ethical professionalism tomorrow's companyAdopting Ethical Professionalism was intended to avoid the possibility of another calamitous meltdown or unavoidable and severe Government action. The City needed to win back credibility with the public, press, and regulators—hence the change bankers promised.

At the start of his term, the Lord Mayor of London [link now dead] put his weight behind an initiative called Trust and Values in the City [link now dead]. A conference was run in November 2011. There, City grandee and Chair of Lazard International, Ken Costa, spoke on the topic of Reconnecting the Financial and the Ethical, an expressive and appropriate title.

When the bankers promised, other professions engaged. The CIPD’s CEO, Peter Cheese, stated on the People Management website [link now dead] that ‘HR is key to restoring trust in Banking’. This promoted how training, change and development skills, amongst others, would contribute to the success (if implemented).

Lady Susan Rice advised the importance of “our behaviours, our mindset, our judgements” and went on to state the need for “Ethical Professionalism” throughout; perhaps she coined the term. The CBI offered a Code of Ethics and Professionalism in the Banking and Finance Industry [link now dead]. At least two were produced in 2009 and 2011, serious endorsements from a major British Institution. Really?

So far, any good?

In March 2015, Harvard Business Review reported that little had changed. This even though JP Morgan had hired an extra 13,000 people in compliance during the previous three years.

By June 2022, IBM reported that the next era in banking would start with reframing trust. Once more,  further cultural tweaking (or at least reframing) was needed. Whatever happened, the precise words ‘Ethical Professionalism’ are hard to find by searching the Internet.

Did Ethical Professionalism have a name change and move forward, at pace, from a concept and proto-policy to a sound reality, or did it simply rise without a trace? Did it transform views of the Banking and Finance sectors?  It seems uncertain, perhaps even improbable. How well did the government follow through? Doubtless, further soul-searching and action are planned by such pious organisations that always take such matters extremely seriously.

Exchanges around Ethical Professionalism

How often have efforts been made to protect the UK public from The City, greed, bad decisions, bonuses for poor performance, political misdeeds and the like? Are such promises to learn the lessons bankable?

Remorse, contrition and promises to improve are trotted out in the press and TV with monotonous regularity, for example:

ping: … you don’t deserve your fat bonuses for failure!

pong: if we don’t pay ’em, the (possibly unethical) talent will leave

ping: who needs ’em?

pong: we do – Finance and Banking is incredibly important to the UK Economy

ping: Finance and Banking is still unethical and opportunistic

pong: that’s a bit harsh; we’re changing

ping: you guys brought the house down, and we’re still paying

pong: we admitted we need better self and management control and oversight

ping: so what have you done about it?

pong: implemented Ethical Professionalism

ping: ***!!!??. you’re taking your time

pong: these things take time

ping: the country is watching you

Yeah, yeah, y…e…a…h

Just how well did the bankers’ promise of Ethical Professionalism progress from policies, procedural manuals and training courses into a way of life? Is it embedded and evident in the hearts and minds of everyone in the Financial Sector?

It was a big promise, a significant Change project that may have provided significant thought leadership and supported a lasting economic recovery for the UK.

Rather inconveniently, some may say that Brexit, by separating the UK from the EU, enabled industrial-scale tax avoidance and money laundering to continue, thus ensuring the continued and untraceable off-shoring of funds. If accurate, this demonstrates a heartbreaking, cynical, and corrupt reality. Has Ethical Professionalism happened in the financial community?

What might have (has) gone wrong?

Aye, right, a million keyboards start to click … With the public statements of so many big names, I hope it’s a case of what might yet go right. After all, we are only thirteen years down the road. Sixteen if you go back to the crash. Perhaps the assurances were simply waffle and spin? Perhaps the sector never really understood the reality of cultural change. Were they committed to their espoused new order? If they had been, surely things would have changed, and we’d have noticed.

Have you come across this old saying?

Doctors who treat themselves have fools for patients.

The same applies to Bankers.

My personal experience of conniving in high places started me writing thrillers.

© Mac Logan

Mac Logan

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