Higher ethical standards to raise trust in the City
31/10/2002
The Financial Services Authority today publishes a Discussion Paper which examines the role of ethical values in raising trust and confidence in financial services and offers an outline framework for action to achieve higher standards in the industry.
FSA chairman, Howard Davies said:
"The reputation of the City as a clean and fair place to do business has been hard won over the centuries but it can easily and very quickly be lost. Recent events, especially in the US, demonstrate that a breakdown of ethical standards within a firm can carry high reputational and financial penalties.
The FSA Principles our high level standards for businesses and practitioners are based on ethical values. But the underlying ethos is not fully understood or consistently applied by everyone working in the industry and we want to stimulate further debate about how firms build our regulatory principles into their own ethical frameworks .
This paper focuses on the territory where business ethics and regulation meet. We explain what we mean by ethical behaviour and why it matters for the financial services industry. We want to establish a clear and explicit shared understanding about what integrity means in practice and the paper sets out a framework for discussion."
The FSA is not suggesting the introduction of new or more Rules for firms the purpose is rather to ask questions that raise key concerns about standards. The paper seeks to test assumptions about what types of behaviour are acceptable, what might constitute sharp practice and how and where people draw the line. The outline ethical framework is accompanied by practical examples of day-to-day scenarios that focus on the kind of issues that people have to face, how they might deal with them and the value judgements they consider in doing so.
Notes for editors
The paper An ethical framework for financial services is available on the FSA Website www.fsa.gov.uk. Comments and thoughts about how the issues raised can be taken forward should be addressed to ethics@fsa.gov.uk.
The Paper was being launched this evening by David Jackman, the FSAs Business Ethics Adviser and Head of Industry Training, in his inaugural lecture as Visiting Professor in Business Ethics at London Metropolitan University.
The FSA regulates the financial services industry and has four objectives under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000: maintaining market confidence; promoting public understanding of the financial system; securing the appropriate degree of protection of consumers; and fighting financial crime.
The FSA aims to maintain efficient, orderly and clean financial markets and help retail consumers achieve a fair deal.
