Probe to examine financial regulator
Monday, 18 July 2011
The inquiry will start in the autumn. It will give the FCA's new head, Martin Wheatley, a bruising start to his job after he leaves Hong Kong's financial regulator to join the watchdog in early September.
The probe will run alongside the existing scrutiny of accountability at the Bank of England, before responsibility for financial regulation is split up next year.
The committee wants to make sure the FCA does not act in a bureaucratic fashion that protects its own interests by imposing heavy limits on firms without taking consumers' interests into account.
Andrew Tyrie, chairman of the committee, said: "Regulation may look like it's free but in the end all regulation is paid for by consumers. They pay a fortune and sometimes they must wonder what they get for it."
The Government is breaking up the Financial Services Authority (FSA) after it failed to spot the brewing financial crisis and only belatedly clamped down on abuse of consumers such as sales of payment protection insurance.
Responsibility for ensuring financial stability will go to the Bank of England, while consumer protection and punishing market abuse will be the FCA's remit.
Financial firms - from multinational banks to sole traders - will pay a levy to fund the FCA, but Mr Tyrie points out that the cost is ultimately passed on to consumers in higher charges.
Mr Tyrie said: "Regulators are there to act in the interests of consumers, not to give a quiet life to the regulator or easy profits to businesses. We need an accountability structure to make sure the consumer gets value for money."
The FSA's prudential regulators are moving to the Bank of England, headed by Mervyn King, who has pledged to clamp down on risky actions. By contrast, the FCA is being carved out as a new institution and the Treasury Committee is concerned that it will pick up where the FSA left off.
The FSA launched the blueprint for the FCA last month and promised tougher action to ban bad products.
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