EU FMs show new resolve to rein in bank bonuses
European finance ministers lined up behind proposals to rein in bank bonuses as governments sought to forge a common stance on overhauling the financial system before a summit of the Group of 20 nations.
French finance minister Christine Lagarde has ���firm proposals to put some order into the system of bonuses���, she said in Brussels before the meeting. France will suggest curbing bonus pools as a percentage of a bank���s revenue, imposing a ceiling on payments or taxing them, a finance ministry official told reporters on Tuesday.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy said on August 31 that they would press fellow G- 20 leaders to regulate bank bonuses as well as require lenders to set aside more capital to avoid a repeat of the financial crisis that has caused global writedowns and losses of $1.6 trillion. G-20 finance ministers meet in London on September 4-5 before a September 24-25 summit of leaders in Pittsburgh.
UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown sees a cap on bonuses as difficult to enforce, The Financial Times reported on Tuesday, citing an interview.
���Very Difficult���
���This will be a very difficult thing to get agreement on and implemented across a wide range of countries,��� said Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London.
���I don���t think the rest of the world will agree to those plans and efforts,��� Otto Waser, chief investment officer at R&A Research & Asset Management AG said in a Bloomberg Television interview on Aug. 27. ���Talents are just going to leave the industry and do their business elsewhere, so I don���t think it���s a workable avenue,��� he said of the French proposals.
Amid concern over policy makers��� demands that banks also set aside more capital to prevent future crises, the cost of protecting bank bonds from default rose in Europe today by the most since May. The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Banks Index was down 1.5 percent at 12:18 p.m. in London.
���Up the Wall���
Merkel, who said the bonus system ���quite rightly drives a lot of people up the wall,��� joined forces with Sarkozy ahead of the last G-20 summit in London in April to demand steps to control executive pay, plus rules governing hedge funds and a new ���architecture��� for financial markets. Merkel, who faces elections on Sept. 27, has since voiced concern that governments may backslide on past G-20 commitments as the recession eases.
The euro-area economy barely contracted in the second quarter, with Germany and France returning to growth after the European Central Bank injected billions of euros into markets and governments offered consumers incentives to spend. World Bank President Robert Zoellick said today the chances of a ���truly global recovery��� have increased because of China���s expansion and signs that other economies are stabilizing.
Stimulus Measures
As evidence mounts that the worst of Europe���s recession has passed, Dutch Finance Minister Wouter Bos said today that policy makers should start thinking about how to unwind government stimulus measures. Other ministers joined calls from the International Monetary Fund���s No. 2 official, John Lipsky, for the exit to be coordinated.
German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck, absent from today���s meeting in Brussels, told his counterparts in a letter last month that failure to align exit strategies risked ���distortions of competition,��� after governments extended more than $2 trillion in fiscal packages and help for banks such as Citigroup Inc. and Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.
The G-20 members are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the U.S., the U.K. and the EU.
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