logo
Time over for banker remorse? Labour must beware relying on the City for economic growth

Time over for banker remorse? Labour must beware relying on the City for economic growth

The Guardian27-07-2025
'There was a period of remorse and apology for banks and I think that period needs to be over.' So said Bob Diamond, the eight-figure-earning Barclays chief executive more than a decade ago.
'We need our banks willing to take risks, to be confident and to work with the private sector in the UK to create jobs and improve economic growth.'
Back in 2011, with the wounds still fresh from the worst financial collapse in a century, there were deafening howls of outrage and anger in UK political circles over the brash American's choice of words.
Time though, is clearly a healer. Had Diamond waited 14 years, presumably the response in Westminster today would be a nod of agreement.
Kier Starmer's government has embraced the City, seeing the Square Mile as a ticket to faster economic growth. It is not natural territory for Labour – but with a faltering economy, a febrile bond market to keep onside, and tight constraints on tax and spending, needs must.
Earlier this month Rachel Reeves could have been channelling Diamond in her Mansion House address. The clean-up job after the crash had gone 'too far in seeking to eliminate risk', the chancellor said. Regulation was a 'boot on the neck of business' that needed lifting.
The message certainly landed with the chief executive of Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, who met the chancellor in 11 Downing Street last week. 'I'm encouraged,' he told Sky. However, the head of the bank dubbed the Vampire Squid warned the government still needed to be careful on tax and regulation. Other senior bankers, including the head of Lloyds Banking Group, have followed suit.
Almost two decades on from the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the multibillion-pound UK taxpayer bailouts, memories of the 2008 crash are wearing increasingly thin. The banks have regrouped, and scent a Labour government prepared to consider the period of remorse is now over.
To some extent, the vibe shift is justified.
Britain's biggest banks have built up significantly more capital to guard against financial shocks, have exited riskier lines of business, and City rulebooks stretching to thousands of pages are in place. Lawmakers elsewhere are considering if risk aversion has gone too far – including in the EU, after the Draghi report.
Could years of nugatory growth post 2008 be linked to overregulation? The Treasury is willing to consider the connection. For years the priority was ending 'too big to fail'. Now safety limits are viewed as a millstone around the neck of the City golden goose, complicated further by Brexit trashing London's prized status as a world-beating financial centre.
It is clear to see why there is appeal in boosting the City. Britain has serious comparative advantages; London has been a global trading hub for centuries, with the legacy of empire giving it the prime spot on the meridian and use of the English language and legal system worldwide. Top universities and a vibrant startup culture help further.
Financial services contribute £200bn to the economy and 5% of all tax receipts, employing more than a million people – two-thirds of whom work outside the capital in big regional financial centres from Edinburgh to Leeds, Manchester and Belfast. It is no coincidence Reeves dubbed her big bang 2.0 plan as the 'Leeds Reforms' to make this point. Finance is more than just the City.
The chancellor is right that a strong economy needs financing. The drying up of liquidity after the 2008 crash – when banks cut back on lending to focus on repairing their balance sheets – showed what happens when borrowing is harder for households and businesses.
However, hosting an oversize financial centre with assets worth £27tn – 10 times the value of everything produced in the UK each year – has serious risks. Labour ought to know this better than most, having been on the hook in government the last time the music stopped.
The Bank of England governor, Andrew Bailey, remembers – having led the central bank's recovery operations during the 2008 crisis. Lest we forget, he warned the Treasury committee last week: 'There isn't a trade-off between financial stability and growth. We've had that experience.'
Sign up to Business Today
Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning
after newsletter promotion
Back then, taxpayer guarantees worth more than £1tn were required to stop the banking collapse turning into a second Great Depression. Still, the damage was monumental: millions of businesses failed, unemployment hit 2.7 million, tens of thousands of homes were repossessed.
Alongside the obvious financial stability risks for a small, open economy, the reinflation of the banking industry could also hurt the government's other priority sectors if handled poorly.
Alongside finance in the government's industrial strategy there are seven other sectors: advanced manufacturing, clean energy, creative industries, defence, digital, life sciences, and professional services. All need access to growth capital, and so a strong banking sector makes sense on paper. In practice, however, there is a risk the banks use their newfound freedoms to pump more money into speculative or overseas activities.
The lesson from history are not particularly encouraging.
Before the 2008 crash, banks were heavily criticised for prioritising speculative activity over lending for the production of goods and services; contributing to the inflation of the biggest property market bubble in history.
Mortgages still account for more than half of all UK bank lending, whereas outstanding credit to non-financial corporations – and for manufacturing in particular – is worth a pittance in comparison.
Hosting mega banks servicing the needs of global investors and corporates brings valuable flows of capital into Britain, sustaining jobs and wealth creation. But there are two-sides to the coin: since the 1980s big bang Britain has suffered from a 'finance curse', or Dutch disease, as the banking sector exploded beyond a useful size for the rest of the domestic economy, crowding out other activity and stoking inequality.
The danger of relying on banks to do the heavy lifting on economic growth is best summed up by the US financial sage Warren Buffett's observation : 'We were promised that a rising tide would lift all boats. [Instead] a rising tide has lifted all yachts.' For the chancellor, a City big bang is only advisable with enough checks and balances to ensure the same does not happen again.
The period of remorse might be over. But 2008 should not be forgotten.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

News Corp's Australian newspaper revenue falls as CEO warns Trump of AI's ‘art of the steal'
News Corp's Australian newspaper revenue falls as CEO warns Trump of AI's ‘art of the steal'

The Guardian

time25 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

News Corp's Australian newspaper revenue falls as CEO warns Trump of AI's ‘art of the steal'

Revenue generated from News Corp's global newspaper mastheads has fallen sharply, including in Australia, weighing down an otherwise positive financial result. Rupert Murdoch's media conglomerate continues to generate large wads of cash from its digital real estate arm but advertising revenue at News Corp Australia, a division that includes the Australian, the Daily Telegraph and the Herald Sun, was down 5% over the past financial year to US$343m (A$530m). Circulation and subscription revenue also fell, according to results released early on Wednesday. Sign up to get Guardian Australia's weekly media diary as a free newsletter Its UK news division, which counts the Times and the Sun among its mastheads, suffered even steeper revenue falls, as weak advertising conditions buffeted media companies around the world. News Corp, a US-headquartered company that is also listed on the ASX, owns mastheads in the US, the UK and Australia, and operates the book publisher HarperCollins. The Murdoch-controlled company also owns the Wall Street Journal publisher Dow Jones and has a majority stake in REA Group, the owner of It announced the sale of Foxtel late last year. While News Corp is best known for its traditional media assets, it describes the book publishing, real estate portal and Dow Jones information businesses as its 'core growth pillars'. The latter two divisions generated record income last year, lifting overall revenue to US$8.45bn (A$13.1bn), up 2%. Its controlling stake in REA has generated an ongoing windfall for News Corp, given that the division is tapped directly into Australia's robust property market. The real estate portal is expected to soon face stiffer competition from its rival Domain, which has just been sold to the US giant CoStar. The News Corp chief executive, Robert Thomson, described the overall result as 'sterling'. Sign up to Weekly Beast Amanda Meade's weekly diary on the latest in Australian media, free every Friday after newsletter promotion Thomson told analysts shortly after the financials were released that News Corp was in 'in the midst of advanced negotiations with several AI companies' over the purchase of its intellectual property. Media companies around the world have raised concerns over how they will be compensated for content already being used to train AI products. In comments designed to attract the attention of the US president, Thomson referred to books including Donald Trump's The Art of the Deal being used by AI engines without compensation. 'Is it right that his books should be consumed by an AI engine which then profits from his thoughts by cannibalising his concepts, thus undermining future sales of his book?' Thomson said. 'Suddenly, The Art of the Deal has become the art of the steal. 'We will fight to protect the intellectual property of our authors and journalists and continue to woo and to sue companies that violate the most basic property rights.'

Police investigating grooming gangs given AI tools to speed up cold case work
Police investigating grooming gangs given AI tools to speed up cold case work

Sky News

time37 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Police investigating grooming gangs given AI tools to speed up cold case work

All police forces investigating grooming gangs in England and Wales will be given access to new AI tools to help speed up their investigations. The artificial intelligence tools are already thought to have saved officers in 13 forces more than £20m and 16,000 hours of investigation time. The apps can translate large amounts of text in foreign languages from mobile phones seized by police, and analyse a mass of digital data to find patterns and relationships between suspects. 2:00 'We must punish perpetrators' The rollout is part of a £426,000 boost for the Tackling Organised Exploitation (TOEX) programme, which supports officers to investigate complex cases involving modern slavery, county lines and child sex abuse. The increased access to the AI technology follows Baroness Casey's recommendation for a national operation to review cold grooming gang cases. That operation will review more than 1,200 closed cases of child sexual exploitation. "The sexual exploitation of children by grooming gangs is one of the most horrific crimes, and we must punish perpetrators, provide justice for victims and survivors, and protect today's children from harm," said safeguarding minister Jess Phillips. "Baroness Casey flagged the need to upgrade police information systems to improve investigations and safeguard children at risk. Today we are investing in these critical tools." 1:36 Lack of ethnicity data 'a major failing' Police forces have also been instructed by the home secretary to collect ethnicity data, as recommended by Baroness Casey. Her June report found the lack of data showing sex offenders' ethnicity and nationality in grooming gangs was "a major failing over the last decade or more". She found that officials avoided the issue of ethnicity for fear of being called racist, but there were enough convictions of Asian men "to have warranted closer examination". The government has launched a national inquiry into the abuse and further details are expected to be announced in the coming weeks.

Record installations of solar panels, batteries and heat pumps so far in 2025
Record installations of solar panels, batteries and heat pumps so far in 2025

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Record installations of solar panels, batteries and heat pumps so far in 2025

A record number of solar panels, batteries and heat pumps have been installed in UK homes and buildings in the first six months of 2025, figures show. Data from MCS (Microgeneration Certification Scheme), the quality mark for small-scale renewables, found there were more than 172,000 certified installations between January and June this year. That is up 37% from the same period in 2024 and a third above the previous record high start to the year, in 2023, the figures show. The MCS said the jump in installations was being driven by three technologies: solar panels, electric heat pumps and battery storage. The top technology is solar panels, with 123,000 certified installations in the first six months of 2025 – a record that breaks the previous January-to-June high set in 2012. There were more than 18,000 installations of batteries, which can allow households to capture excess power from solar panels or charge up from the grid when electricity is cheap and then use it at more expensive peak times to cut bills. The figure is more than double the near 8,000 batteries installed in the same period in 2024, the MCS said. Meanwhile, certified installations of highly efficient heat pumps, which run on electricity to draw heat from the air or ground to warm homes and heat water, reached 30,000 in the first half of the year, up 12% on the first half of 2024. The figures also show that there were almost 50,000 renewable installations on newbuild properties, accounting for 28% of the total for the year so far, and significantly up on the first half of 2024, when they made up 21% of the 125,000 installations overall. The MCS said that, with the Future Homes Standard set to mandate solar panels and low carbon heating in newbuild homes from 2027, there was massive potential for growth in the low carbon tech industry as the Government attempts to boost house building. And the organisation said one of the key drivers behind the increasing number of renewable installations was government financial support, through schemes such as the £7,500 grant for new heat pumps to replace boilers in homes. The latest available figures from January to March show that about three quarters of heat pump installations were wholly or partially supported with government funding. Ian Rippin, chief executive at MCS, said: 'Across all renewable technologies, we are seeing a dramatic rise in the number of installations being delivered into homes, helping to reduce energy bills for consumers and drive down emissions. 'Crucially, there are also more MCS certified installers than ever before, which means a growing capacity to deliver high-quality installations at volume into people's homes.' Miatta Fahnbulleh, minister for energy consumers, said: ' People can save hundreds of pounds off their energy bills when installing renewable and low-carbon technologies like solar panels, heat pumps and batteries. 'So, it is no wonder that installations in the first six months of 2025 have broken records, as households recognise it just makes financial sense.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store