New Delhi,
October 13, 2011
As finance ministers of G20
countries gather in Paris for a meeting on Friday, October 14, 2011,
Consumers International, which represents 220 consumer organisations
in 115 countries, together with national consumer organisations in all
G20 countries,, expressed dismay that the proposals for financial
consumer protection being considered by G20 finance ministers “still
fall short of what is required”, through a jointly signed open letter
to G20 leaders.
Pradeep S. Mehta, Secretary General, CUTS International and Shirish
Deshpande, Chairman, Mumbai Grahak Panchayat are signatories to this
letter from India, along with James A Guest, President, Consumers
International, and leaders of other consumer organisations across the
world.
In September 2010, CI working with consumer organisations in all G20
countries launched the ‘Consumers for Fair Financial Services’
campaign calling for the G20 to take urgent action to support
financial consumer protection. Following the launch of the campaign,
the G20 leaders meeting in Seoul in November 2010 requested the
Financial Stability Board (FSB) to report on options to enhance
protection in consumer finance (credit), and the G20 finance ministers
requested the ‘Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’
(OECD) to develop a set of ‘high level principles on financial
consumer protection’. Both proposals will now be presented to G20
finance ministers in Paris, 14-15 October and the G20 leaders in
November.
While CI and its members contributed formally to the process, there is
disappointment that key demands were not included in the final
submission.
The global consumer rights movement believes crucial omissions in new
G20 proposals on financial services, to be considered by the meeting,
will mean they do little to improve protection for consumers from bank
failures and will fail to remove risky mortgages and poor credit
services from the market.
The letter urges the G20 to “remember that weak consumer protection in
the form of irresponsible mortgage lending was both a catalyst for the
financial crisis, and is a long-standing concern of ‘ordinary people’
who use financial services every day.”
As outlined in the open letter, the proposals “do not include any
explicit reference to deposit guarantees in the event of bank
failures, nor do [they] support the adoption of minimum standards for
financial products.” CI believes these are crucial steps for avoiding
any future financial crises.
CI also calls for G20 leaders to support the establishment of a new
international organisation to champion financial consumer protection
in banking and the provision of credit. CI has proposed that the
organisation is based on an existing network of national financial
consumer protection agencies and has an independent consumer panel to
monitor, challenge and advice.
President of Consumers International, Jim Guest, will be addressing
finance ministers and central bank executives on Friday, October 14,
ahead of the G20 meeting, raising concerns of CI and its member
organisations.
For
more details, please contact
George Cheriyan, Director,
CUTS International, 098292 85930,
gc@cuts.org