
	by Colin Todhunter
	April 09, 2014
	
	from
	
	ColinTodhunter Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
		
			
				| 
				About the authorOriginally from the northwest of England, Colin Todhunter has 
				spent many years in India.
 
				He has written extensively 
				for the Bangalore-based Deccan Herald, New Indian Express 
				 
				and Morning Star (Britain).
				 
				His articles have also 
				appeared in many other newspapers, journals and books. 
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	The Destructive Impacts of Financial Markets
	
	The enormous power and destructive influence of financial markets became 
	apparent after the global economic collapse of 2008. 
	
	 
	
	This event revealed a need for bringing the 
	sector under democratic public ownership; failing that, stronger regulations 
	for financial markets at the very least. But political will has been lacking 
	on both counts. The sector enjoys massive financial resources and 
	successfully translates them into political influence.
	
	Many ordinary people might be wondering why governments have not curtailed 
	the criminality of the financial sector on the back of the economic crisis 
	which it created. Instead, billions of Dollars, Pounds and Euros have been 
	handed over to the sector, and governments continue to grant banks free rein 
	and thus dictate national economic and social policies.
	
	If bankers and financiers are to be able to stuff their bulging suitcases 
	with taxpayer handouts and to further loot economies, it is essential for 
	them to have politicians in their pockets. 
	
	 
	
	One way by which this is achieved is shown in a 
	new report, which indicates that the financial industry spends more than 120 
	million Euros a year on lobbying in Brussels and employs more than 1,700 
	lobbyists to influence EU policy-making.
	
	
	The report, 'The 
	Fire Power of the Financial Lobby' has been released by the,
	
		
			- 
			
			Corporate Europe Observatory 
- 
			
			ÖGB Europabüro (Brussels office of the 
			Austrian Trade Union Federation) 
- 
			
			AK EUROPA (Brussels office of the 
			Austrian Chamber of Labour) 
	
	Kenneth Haar from Corporate Europe 
	Observatory says:
	
		
		"Reform has proved difficult, and these 
		numbers are an important part of the explanation. The financial lobby's 
		fire power to resist reform has been evident in all significant battles 
		over financial regulation since the collapse of Lehman Brothers."
	
	
	The report shows the financial industry commands 
	tremendous lobbying resources and enjoys privileged access to decision 
	makers. 
	
	 
	
	The financial sector lobbies EU decision-makers 
	by means of over 700 organizations, including companies' public relations 
	offices, business associations, and consultancies.
	
	This figure outnumbers civil-society organizations and trade unions working 
	on financial issues by a factor of more than five. And the imbalance is even 
	greater when numbers of staff and lobbying expenses are compared. 
	
	 
	
	The report shows that the financial lobby 
	massively outspends other actors by a factor of more than 30. In order to 
	arrive at a safe estimate, the survey used the most conservative figures.
	
	
	 
	
	The actual numbers - and the imbalance between 
	different interests - are thus likely to be far higher. This underestimate 
	is mainly due to the lack of a mandatory register of lobbyists at the EU 
	level that would provide reliable information for proper monitoring.
	
	The report also shows the presence of the financial industry in the EU's 
	official advisory groups that play a key role in helping to shape policy.
	
	
	 
	
	And, here too, the financial lobby is massively 
	over-represented: 
	
		
		15 of the 17 expert groups covered by the 
		study were heavily dominated by the financial industry.
	
	
	Oliver Röpke, from ÖGB Europabüro said:
	
		
		"This situation represents a severe 
		democratic problem that politicians must act on swiftly. A first step is 
		to adopt effective rules on lobbying transparency and strong ethics 
		rules against undue influence."
	
	
	Amir Ghoreishi from AK EUROPA said:
	
		
		"The fact that the financial lobby is so 
		dominant in advisory groups reveals that the European Commission feels 
		that people representing the financial industry should be allowed to set 
		the agenda. An arms-length principle should be applied immediately."
	
	
	The report is a damning indictment of the 
	sector's political influence. The sector continues to rake in unimaginable 
	profits, while sucking the life out of economies. 
	
	 
	
	Ordinary people continue to pay the price via 
	the privatization of public assets and 'austerity'. 
	
		
		"The stench emanating from the financial 
		system is a product of the decay of the entire profit system. That 
		system must be replaced by a higher socio-economic order in which the 
		vast wealth created by the collective labour of the world working class 
		is deployed to meet human need. 
		 
		
		The expropriation of the banks and finance 
		houses, placing them under public ownership and democratic control, is 
		the first step in implementing such a program." 
		
		Nick Beams
		(1)
	
	
	Read the full report at "The 
	Fire Power of the Financial Lobby - A Survey of the Size of the Financial 
	Lobby at the EU level".
 
	
	 
	
	
	Note
	
		
		1)
		
		
		https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/02/08/pers-f08.html