Financial Services Bill

Part of Oral Answers to Questions — Home Department – in the House of Commons at 4:40 pm on 6 February 2012.

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Photo of George Osborne George Osborne The Chancellor of the Exchequer 4:40, 6 February 2012

My right hon. Friend makes a very good point about the international nature of this business. We must try to design a regulatory system that protects the British taxpayer from rogue traders and illegal activity in individual firms that might create broader systemic risks. We must also be alert to broader risks building up in the system—for example, when trying to moderate the impact of a credit boom. This is not just a question of dealing with individual risks and individual firms; it is also a question of dealing with risks across the financial system.

My right hon. Friend is completely right to draw our attention to the need for regulators to work together better internationally. The least well developed piece of the financial regulatory system, post-crash—the one lesson that has not yet been taken far enough—involves the way in which we can better protect the world from large international businesses that live internationally but die nationally, such as Lehman Brothers. Co-ordinating resolution regimes across the different jurisdictions will be the work of international bodies such as the G20 and the Financial Stability Board in the year ahead.