Alastair Darling Warns The Bank Of England And The EU Will Take Accountability From Parliament

Darling Bank England Eu Mervyn King

The Huffington Post UK   First Posted: 20/02/2012 22:15 Updated: 21/02/2012 14:57

Serious issues surrounding accountability are likely to emerge due to the increasing powers of the Bank of England and the European Union, former chancellor Alastair Darling has warned.

In a speech at Westminster on Monday evening Darling said he broadly supported the Coalition's plans to transfer supervision powers from the Financial Services Authority to the Bank of England, but warned that doing so would raise some "pretty interesting issues," because "chances are, we will, at some stage, have turbulence within the system."

Darling previously documented tension between the Treasury and the governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King, in his memoir of the Gordon Brown administration, Back from the Brink. Speaking before an audience of MPs and parliamentary staff on Monday, he said of King's enhanced role under Coalition plans:

"At some stage when it starts to get into territory when he's doing something controversial and difficult, I just wonder whether routine appearances by the governor before the Treasury committee will be sufficient. "

The Coalition plans to end the so-called "tripartite" system which has existed since 1997, and give the Bank of England powers to regulate the City whilst also retaining its current powers to set interest rates. Darling warned that: "The system is only as safe as the people who are in it," adding that the Bank of England has no "formal accountability".

But Darling spared the bulk of his criticism for the European Union, saying even though it was being given more powers to run the continent's financial affairs, "if left to its own devices, will have more power still".

He lamented the trend towards finance ministers in Europe, and in the case of the Italian PM Mario Monti, actual leaders, having no formal accountability towards voters. He said that even during the financial crisis of 2008 he often found himself in the minority at meetings of EU financial ministers, in that he was directly elected as an MP.

Most finance ministers "appear to be partners in Goldman Sachs" and part of an exclusive club, he said, warning: "If we ever do get to a situation where EU countries are submitting their budgets for approval by the European Commission, that will fly in the face of constitutional accountability.

"The system needs to be a servant of us, not the other way around, and I'm not sure we are heading in the right direction," he said.

In a broad speech as part of a series of lectures convened by the Commons speaker, John Bercow, on the relationship between ministers and parliament, Darling lamented that the Labour governments of Blair and Brown had often "neglected" the Commons.

In his introductory remarks Bercow described Darling as a "real man of government" but said he was someone who had always shown great courtesy and respect towards Parliament.

Towards the end of the speech Darling was asked how accurate the 1970s sitcom Yes, Minister was having served in so many Whitehall departments.

"I now realise that 'Yes Minister' was a documentary," Darling replied. "'The Thick of It' is good, but not quite in the same league as 'Yes Minister'."

Darling said he had "no plans to be a minister in the foreseeable future." He is widely tipped to be a significant advocate for the "No' campaign in the forthcoming referendum on Scottish independence.

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"Of course, resolving the Greek situation is only part of resolving the eurozone crisis but I think we took a really significant step towards that last night and that is good for Britain because resolving the eurozone crisis would be the biggest boost that Britain could get for its economy this year."
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Serious issues surrounding accountability are likely to emerge due to the increasing powers of the Bank of England and the European Union, former chancellor Alastair Darling has warned. In a speech...
Serious issues surrounding accountability are likely to emerge due to the increasing powers of the Bank of England and the European Union, former chancellor Alastair Darling has warned. In a speech...
 
 
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Mickey Mouse 1
There are no lies or deceit on a chess board.
06:52 PM on 02/22/2012
A captain of a sunken cruise ship is being questioned by the police and a coach driver is being questioned by the police following an accident . But no one is being held to account for causing the credit crunch which nearly destoyed the world's financial system and has put millions out of work and out of their homes?
03:04 PM on 02/21/2012
Please visit www.britishseniorcitizensparty.freeiz.com for the truth about the financial crisis straight from the US enquiry into the fraud and greed over there. The banks were a victim of the Rating Agencies "shocking abdication of their responsabilities" to quote the inquiry. Thats not to say the banks were not also doing naughty things.
For their part they were, and still are, operateing a "shadow banking system" whereby they left off their Balance Sheets 75% of their trading activities which were in tax haven trusts around the world. Can you think what would happen to a company in Britain if the Inland Revenue found out about such things????? IRS must have turned a blind eye. Nick & Dave must have turned a blind eye because both their families are involved in finance. Expenses scandle all over again x1000
03:03 PM on 02/21/2012
Oh Darling....
09:17 AM on 02/21/2012
"The system needs to be a servant of us, not the other way around, and I'm not sure we are heading in the right direction," he said.......What a pity he does not acknowledge the fact that ALL politicians should be subservient to the will of the people when it comes to matters such as European membership.
WE NEED A REFERENDUM
02:38 PM on 02/21/2012
British Senior Citizens are promoting Independent MP's in Westminster. Come and join us.
03:35 AM on 02/21/2012
Our economy had already been completely trashed by the time Alistair Darling became Chancellor. It was the more or less complete failure of the FSA to properly regulate banking here for years plus the squandering of huge record tax revenues, to which was added hundreds of billions in new debt on a still unreformed public sector that did this to us.

While Alistair Darling is right to raise the question of Bank of England accountability but where is the accountability of the one person whose gross errors and recklessness with our tax money and future prospects were the cause of this crisis - Gordon Brown? He should be put on trial for what he has done.
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jessjesskk
Benevolent Zombie Power
06:17 AM on 02/21/2012
trial for what? I am, by very large, not a fan of Brown, but who, at a time of relative economic growth, would have accepted huge reforms of the entitlement system?
Tough changes are usually accepted only at the edge of collapse because there are no other choices. It is sad and frightening but it is almost always like that.
Up to the tipping point, nobody realizes the bad course of action
02:48 PM on 02/21/2012
Hi, you have got it wrong friend Please visit "britishseniorcitizensparty.freeiz.com" for the truth about this crisis.G.Brown kept our finances better than any Chancellor for the last 60 yrs. He then got on a plane to USA & EU to arrange the only method of saving the banks and thousands of jobs therein, and the world economies.The US Rating Agencies were found to be at fault together with the US mortgage industry under G bush & A Greenspan. Read about it on line at "causes of the early 2000's financial crisis"
02:51 PM on 02/21/2012
Apologies but a trillion pounds' worth of UK national debt says you're wrong.
11:36 PM on 02/20/2012
its a shame he was not held accountable for his previous actions !!!
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02:24 AM on 02/21/2012
I bet 99.999999999999% of people reading this article think the same.
11:28 PM on 02/21/2012
Unfortunately you may be correct, but that's down to most following the wrong papers. And being to lazy to think for themselves.