Maurice Glasman writes:
The Co-operative Bank came out of the financial
crash with half a percent of the toxic debt that characterised its high street
rivals, but within five years it has gone the way of much of the rest of the
financial sector. It will be a while before it can say it is "good with
money" again.
Not one of the mutuals privatised in the 80s and 90s now
exists as an autonomous institution and that is because it is not only the
state that centralises power.
Capital also centralises ownership. We see this
in energy and communications, as well as finance. We are living in an age of
the oligarchs and our rulers are not accountable.
The scandal leaves us with a decimated mutual
sector at a time when both the market and the state have failed to preserve any
sense of ethical practice in the financial sector. What went wrong here?
The Co-operative movement needs to take this
opportunity to recognise why it has become such a marginal force in the economy
and politics.
Lesson number one: it downplayed the necessity of tension and
conflict in its practice and tradition. It embraced a flat system of
egalitarian membership in which, unsurprisingly, elites get their way as they
are not held to account by interests but by a placid membership going along
with things.
I am a John Lewis heretic. It doesn't pay a
living wage to all workers and its staff or partners are not organised in a way
that can challenge a quite authoritarian pattern of management. I cannot find
an example of when its leadership has been defeated by its membership.
The horrible phrase used by people like me is a
"multi-stakeholder model" of governance in which those with an
interest in the flourishing of the institution, like workers and users, are
organised and sit on the board. They have the expertise and experience to hold
unaccountable elites to account.
A third of the seats on the Co-op board should
have gone to users and workers so the institution could not be captured by the
self-interest of its managers, who pay themselves and develop strategy in their
own interest.
This is a model that could be usefully adopted throughout our
policy and economy: a third of seats for funders, a third for workers and a
third for managers to negotiate a balance of interests.
It works well in
Germany in public and private sectors. Such a "partnership" model
could restore trust and integrity, as well as give incentives to participation
and responsibility.
Lesson number two is that size is not the most
important goal in the growth of a business. By absorbing the toxic waste land
of the Britannia building society, the Co-op Bank took on far more debt than it
could handle and it sank the ship.
What was the process of governance that,
following the crash, could have made sense of such an act of recklessness? Once
again there is a lack of virtue, of a balance of power, of reason itself in
such a process.
Third, the co-operative movement needs to learn
how to organise again, developing and training leaders who can participate in
its corporate governance.
The tragedy of this story is that we have never been
in greater need of the benefits that mutual responsibility bring. In the name
of expansion and profit maximisation, that inheritance has been squandered. It
leaves us institutionally and financially bankrupt.
I work with my mum's yellow hard-backed
Co-operative savings book in front of me. When I look at the small sums she
deposited when she was 14 and starting work, it brings me closer to her and to
the hopes that she had for a better future.
She trusted the Co-op and she
passed that on to me. I am angry with the Reverend Flowers for trashing
my inheritance and angry with a movement that was not prepared to hold its
rulers to account.
We need to rediscover tension and conflict in order to bring
the Co-operative movement back to life.
It's a great article, but its analysis could be extended to cover the whole of the British legal and Parliamentary system.
ReplyDeleteTension and conflict, manifested in that great tug of war between Lords and Commons, between Monarch and Parliament, between prosecution and defence, between judge and jury, between Parliament and free press, and between the Parliamentary parties (separated by a narrow battle-line in Parliament, so close they can smell each other's breath) has, more than anything else, sustained our unique freedoms for centuries.
Now our unique liberties are disappearing fast, as those vital "tensions and conflicts" subside-as the disembowelled Lords becomes an appointed, eviscerated servant of the Commons, as we increasingly move towards the horrible Continental legal system combining judge and prosecutor (and indeed abolishing juries) as our Monarch fades into an irrelevant figurehead and our free press is shackled by the very same people it is meant to hold in check, and our Parliamentary parties merge into one, on so many issues.
The death of that essential "tension and conflict"-that produced Britain's balanced Constitution-has killed much more than the co-operative movement.
But that bit about the Press is hysterical pleading in a foreign interest which is now on trial as a criminal conspiracy.
ReplyDeleteAnd that bit about parties merging into one has been out of date for three years.
The bit about the press has never been more true.
ReplyDeleteNow the other institutions that were meant to hold the state in check are either dead or dying (e.g the Lords, Christianity, common law, the 1688 Bill of Rights, the unions etc ad nauseum) then a free press is really the last bulwark left against tyranny.
And the bit about the three parties has never been more "in date".
There is not a jot of difference between them over marriage, mass immigration, Greenism, grammar schools, EU membership, the assault on Christianity across our public sector and 'third sector', the creeping Continental abolition of our ancient laws and liberties...or indeed anything important.
UKIP is actually the only party that takes a stand that is moderately different from those three-which is why they all think it is "extreme".
Oh, go to bed.
ReplyDeleteUKIP, indeed!
No, give the lad his due, the Tories have become Ed Miliband's Labour over state action in the economy, the specific issue of pay day loan interest rate caps, and no war with Iran.
ReplyDeletePoint taken.
ReplyDeleteUKIP is commendably opposed to war with Iran, although I doubt that its louder cheerleaders are aware of that. Certainly, they would never tell it to their readers.
What, if anything, UKIP thinks about payday loans, who knows? I could be surprised, although I doubt it very much. But if I am, then, again, that would come as news to that party's most outspoken enthusiasts.
UKIP's media allies probably see both of today's welcome developments as opportunities to define the party against them in order to distinguish it from the "left-wing" Conservatives, the LibLabCon, and all that.
Nobody is "surprised"-UKIP is the only party with a longstanding commitment to sever retail banking from investment banking.
ReplyDeleteAnd, on all the issues I mentioned, the three parties are in collusion.
As they have been for many years.
Your hysteria because something goes our way for once on Syria, or on loans, is touching.
It doesn't change anything.
The vote on Syria has, as we now see, changed the world.
ReplyDeleteAgain, I wonder how many UKIP supporters know about that banking policy, and how many of them would still be UKIP supporters if they did?
And the more "collusion" against loan sharking, or against wars in Iran, the better.