UK watchdog warns bankers over failure to take diversity
seriously
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[December 19, 2018]
By Huw Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Senior managers in
financial services could lose their jobs if they fail to tackle
bullying, homophobia and other unacceptable conduct in the workplace,
Britain' Financial Conduct Authority said on Wednesday.
Under FCA rules, people must be deemed "fit and proper" to work in the
finance industry in Britain, but this requirement also encompasses a
broader view of workplace conduct, the watchdog warned.
Christopher Woolard, the FCA executive director for strategy and
competition, said the watchdog and financial firms had already
identified individuals as not "fit and proper" because they had not
taken this broader definition seriously.
"The result being that they were unable to take up or continue in their
role," Woolard said in a speech.
"In our judgement, the way a senior manager approaches issues around
diversity may be relevant to our assessment of their competence and
character."
The FCA received its highest number of disclosures from whistleblowers
after its director for supervision, Megan Butler, warned financial firms
in May about failing to tackle sexual harassment.
The disclosures related to racism, physical bullying and homophobia, as
well as issues around gender, Woolard said.
Currently only 15 percent of directors and 6.5 percent of chief
executives at firms regulated by the FCA are women.
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The logo of the new Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is seen at the
agency's headquarters in the Canary Wharf business district of
London April 1, 2013. REUTERS/Chris Helgren (BRITAIN - Tags:
BUSINESS POLITICS LOGO)
Woolard said that cultivating a diverse and vocal workforce was not just a
question of mitigating the risk of groupthink, it was also potentially a
competitive advantage to organizations and core to having the right company
culture.
"That’s why we plan to explore the relationship between diversity and firm
behavior, including misconduct, to understand if there is a link between the
two."
Lorraine Johnston, regulatory counsel at law firm Ashurst, said the FCA was
putting this so-called "non-financial" misconduct on the same footing as
traditional financial misconduct such as market abuse or insider dealing.
"Bad behavior, in whatever form, is exactly what the FCA is looking to stamp out
in its conduct risk agenda," Johnston said.
(Reporting by Huw Jones. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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