Management

Darling tells bankers to do their jobs

UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling said bankers should stop complaining and get to work. - Bank chiefs plot regulatory response - Key WTO members meet tomorrow to discuss Doha Round - Cost-cutting phase over, time to transform biz: HCL Tech - Globalisation rules must take India, others on board: Sarkozy - "Globalisation rules must take India, others on board" - CEOs upbeat over growth prospects, to raise headcount Darling, who spoke today to reporters before meeting bankers at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, said, “my message would be, is rather than feel sorry for yourselves the best thing is to work with governments.” “It’s in their interest to get off the front pages and do what they’re supposed to do — provide credit to the economy,” he said. Leaders of some of the world’s biggest banks met in Davos to plot how to reassert their influence with regulators and governments a week after US President Barack Obama shocked them with plans that may force large banks to limit their size and curb investments in hedge funds and private equity. In the UK, Darling imposed a 50 per cent tax on bonuses of more than £25,000 ($40,310). “There’s a recognition among a number of bankers that can see the bigger picture that maintaining a stand-off, swapping insults, doesn’t work,” he said. “Banks have to operate in the same world as the rest of us.”


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Will not take less than Rs 200/qtl: Tikait
The sugarcane growers of Uttar Pradesh have declined the state government’s offer of selling their produce at Rs 160-170 a quintal, a rate less than what their counterparts in Uttarakhand are getting.
Popular Articles
payday loans online

Recession impact: Gulf region is global petrochem hub
The global petrochemical industry’s centre of gravity is shifting to the feedstock-rich West Asia as dozens of new projects are coming up in the region while production falters elsewhere. According to Chemical Week, co-organiser of the Fourth Annual GPCA Forum, 19 million metric tonne ethylene, the key building block for petrochemicals, is scheduled to be added annually to the Gulf region capacity over the next five years, nearly doubling the current capacity and providing extensive raw materials for downstream industries.
Polygraphy
A K Bhattacharya: Sweet and bitter memories of a decade
A K Bhattacharya / New Delhi December 2, 2009, 0:09 IST