Except it is nothing of the sort. As Evan Davis emphasised when interviewing him on Today this morning, John Cridland is employed to speak on behalf of the banks, because the major banks are all members of the CBI.
And well done to Davis: I cannot remember the last time I heard something this instructive on Today.
In fact the membership of the CBI is composed of some very unlikely groups, as a briefing from Friends of the Earth makes clear:
The CBI membership also includes a range of professional associations, universities and other public bodies – not obvious candidates to be embraced by the organisation’s boast of being “The Voice of British Business”. These include several tourist boards, the British Racing Drivers Club, the Professional Cricketers Association, the Warwickshire Cricket Club, the British Library and the Birmingham Symphony Orchestra.To return to the banks, Cridland was making the error that led to the credit crunch and the subsequent economic collapse: the idea that regulation of banks is undesirable and that such regulations as exist are to be got around if at all possible.
John Lanchester's Whoops!: Why Everyone Owes Everyone and No One Can Pay is worth reading on this point - and many others.
5 comments:
Hear Hear! Did it never occurr to Cridland that he was defending the socialist idea that the nation's taxpayers should be prepared to bail out unviable businesses (i.e. banks).
Agreed - my thoughts were similar too: http://livingonwords.blogspot.com/2011/08/government-shouldnt-listen-to-bankers.html
I actually knew John Cridland when he was a teenager at Boston Grammar School. He seemed perfectly rational and reasonable then; wonder what went wrong?
You have no f**king idea what you are talking about. Calder, you are a t**t!
Thanks, Anonymous. I often think that getting well-argued comments is the best part of blogging.
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