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Posts Tagged ‘Vince Cable’

Crossed cables

I have to say my opinion of new business secretary Vince Cable’s fulsome praise of the UK car industry was tempered somewhat when I got back to the office today to find he’d made some pretty tough comments prior to Toyota’s new Auris hybrid event.

Perhaps not wishing to rain on Toyota’s parade, Cable seemed to imply that state aid to the auto industry would be harder to come by in the future now that the UK sector seemed to be returning to more robust health.

It was frankly, by far the more interesting angle but I don’t suppose he’s reached his elevated position without knowing what to say to whom and at the right time.

Maybe he was being polite out of deference to his hosts but he certainly didn’t mention any of the tougher measures at the Auris ceremony.

Politicians eh?

Inventor urges patent law change

By Nick Higham
BBC News

Trevor Baylis

A major British inventor is calling for a change in the law to strengthen protection against those who try to steal ideas.

Trevor Baylis, who invented the wind-up radio, has written to the business secretary urging him to criminalise the theft of intellectual property.

The move would involve a fundamental change to the law on patents.

Currently, inventors have to sue those they believe have stolen their idea through the civil courts.

Patent process

Inventors who want to stop others copying their ideas can go to the UK Intellectual Property Office (formerly the Patent Office) and take out a patent.

But that’s expensive for lone inventors without corporate backing: among other costs, the services of a specialised patent attorney will set an applicant back at least £2,500.

"I believe that UK plc should stand behind those courageous individuals whose ideas can change all our lives both commercially and socially"

Trevor Baylis

And patents enjoy protection only under civil law: a patent-holder who believes their idea has been ripped off must themselves sue for compensation through the civil courts.

"If I was to nick your car, which is worth £10,000, say, I could go to jail," Trevor Baylis told the BBC.

"But if I were to knick your patent, which is worth a million pounds, you’d have to sue me.

"And if I was a colossal company, or indeed another country, that had stolen your invention, how could you find a million pounds a day to take me to court"

The answer, he says, is to make stealing a patent a criminal offence – just as it’s already a criminal offence to steal copyright from creative people like authors and musicians.

That way the state, not the individual inventor, would bear the costs of going to court.

"I believe that theft of intellectual property rights should be treated as a white collar crime," he says in his letter to Lord Mandelson.

"I believe that UK plc should stand behind those courageous individuals whose ideas can change all our lives both commercially and socially."

"Honest, decent people running reputable businesses infringe patents. They might not know the patent exists, or their patent attorney might have told them it was valid or infringed"

Member of Chartered Institute of Patent Attorneys

Mr Baylis, who lives in an eccentric house-cum-workshop which he built himself on Eel Pie Island, in the middle of the River Thames off Twickenham, says he has the support of the Federation of Small Businesses, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers and of his local MP, the Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman Vince Cable.

In 2002 Mr Cable introduced a private member’s bill which increased the penalties for copyright theft from a maximum of two years to 10 years imprisonment.

Patent theft, he says now, "is just part of life" and tougher action needs to be taken to stamp it out.

But the defenders of the present system say changing the law may not be the right answer.

Patents can be extremely complex things and the criminal law is simply too blunt an instrument to use when disputes arise.

Peter Jackson is a fellow of the Chartered Institute of Patent Attorneys.

"First of all you’ve got to decide whether the patent covers the thing properly." he says.

"And having done that you’ve got to decide whether what the alleged infringer is up to falls within that strict wording.

"That can take days and weeks and months of deliberation by highly skilled lawyers, and I’m not sure the criminal system is well-suited to that kind of action."

Other members of the institute are more forthright.

One calls the idea of criminalising patent infringement "barking mad".

Another says the parallel with copyright protection is not as close as it might appear: "Patent infringement is not remotely like flogging knock-off CDs.

"Honest, decent people running reputable businesses infringe patents. They might not know the patent exists, or their patent attorney might have told them it was valid or infringed."

And patent attorneys say criminalisation might have a "chilling" effect on innovation, by forcing a patent-holder’s rivals to "play safe" for fear of committing a criminal offence.

Instead they point to the mediation service run by the Intellectual Property Office as an alternative to costly legal action.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Darling presses banks on lending

Chancellor says he is ‘extremely concerned’ about cost of borrowing remaining high while interest rates are low

Alistair Darling today called on banks to improve lending to businesses, saying he was “extremely concerned” about the cost of borrowing.

Bank bosses are to be summoned to explain why they are charging more for credit when interest rates are at historically low levels. The chancellor suggested they had failed to keep promises to improve lending facilities in return for taxpayer support.

He said banks had not been rescued as “some sort of charitable act … We did it because if you don’t have a banking system that creates credit for businesses then you will make recovery and prosperity after that much more difficult.”

Speaking on BBC1′s Andrew Marr Show, Darling acknowledged that banks needed to rebuild their balance sheets in the aftermath of the financial crisis. But he said: “At the same time, because of the particular circumstances we are in now, because of the fact we’ve got this recession, we also need them to lend money and that’s why we recapitalised them to do that.

“That means they’ve got to live up to the promises they’ve made. That’s why we will be going through with each individual bank asking them why is it, at a time when the cost of borrowing is coming down, it would appear that the cost to small business appears to have gone up? We’re playing our part; the banks have got to understand that the public will not understand it if they do not play their part to the full.”

Angela Knight, chief executive of the British Bankers’ Association, said banks were improving lending. “As far as the major banks are concerned they are lending, and increasing their lending,” she told BBC Radio 4′s The World This Weekend.

On interest rates, she said the base rate did not represent the real cost of money. “People say, ‘look, base rate is down to 0.5%, so why do you charge what you do for lending?’ The answer to that is that you can’t get the money at that rate. Base rate is not the money which a bank pays.”

Knight said the wholesale price of money was about twice that of the Bank of England rate. “But also, what there isn’t is capacity in the wholesale market because it’s credit crunch worldwide, so in fact the cost to the banks has gone up.”

Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrats’ spokesman on Treasury affairs, said: “It is amazing that the chancellor of the exchequer has only just woken up to the fact that this is a problem. We have been warning about the lending crisis, including in government-owned banks, for months.

“The problem isn’t just about the cost of borrowing, but the difficulties which many companies who are solvent, with a good credit history, have in obtaining bank credit without unreasonable demands for personal security and charges. It’s time the government stopped being a passive investor in the nationalised and semi-nationalised banks and ensured that they maintain lending to good British companies for the wider interest of the national economy.”

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UK GDP falls faster than expected

• GDP down 0.8% in threee months to June
• City had expected a 0.3% decline, with some expecting growth

The chancellor’s forecasts for economic growth were blown out of the water official figures revealed Britain’s economy contracted by a record 5.6% over the last year as output fell for a fifth straight quarter.

Dashing hopes that the steepest decline in growth since the 1930s might be nearing an end, the Office for National Statistics said gross domestic product – the total value of goods and services in the economy – fell by 0.8% in the three months to June. The size of the drop surprised the City, which had expected only a 0.3% decline following recent signs of a pickup in the housing market and strong growth in high street spending.

But although the news caused the pound to fall 0.5% against the dollar to $1.64, the FTSE 100 saw its 10th straight day of gains, ending up 16.8 points, or 0.4%, at 4,577.

Economists believe GDP will almost certainly contract by more than the Treasury’s forecast of between –3.25% and –3.75% this year.

“It would be a miracle [if the government's target was met],” said Colin Ellis, European economist at Daiwa Securities SMBC. “Not on the scale of water into wine but not far off.”

The economy has already contracted by 3.16% this year and analysts are predicting a drop of 4.5% for 2009 as a whole.

Hetal Mehta, senior economic adviser to the Ernst & Young Item Club, said the economy would have to grow by 1% in the third quarter of the year and by 1.8% in the final three months to meet the government’s target of –3.75%.

The Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman, Vince Cable, said: “These figures blow a hole in the chancellor’s GDP forecast for this year. The government’s failure to address the crisis in bank lending is only making the economic outlook worse. As a result, the deficit will balloon further, leading to bigger spending cuts or higher taxes.” The shadow chancellor, George Osborne, said: “These disappointing figures are much worse than expected and show that the recession is longer and deeper than the government had led us to believe. The sad news is this will mean the rise in unemployment is likely to be even steeper.”

Before yesterday’s data, some economists had even predicted the UK could post its first positive growth since early 2008, and the size of the decline prompted immediate speculation that the Bank of England would be forced into fresh emergency action to kickstart activity.

While the pace of decline in GDP slowed from the 2.4% seen in the first three months of 2009, the economy has suffered a cumulative contraction of 5.7% in the last five quarters.

The ONS said this was double the drop in the recession of the early 1990s and almost as big as the 6.4% retrenchment during the 1980-81 slump. The 5.6% drop in GDP in a year has not been matched since comparable records began in 1955.

Business services and finances, a sector that has boomed for much of the last decade, accounted for more than a quarter of the GDP decline in the second quarter. Overall, services fell by 0.6% on the quarter and by 3.8% on the year.

Describing the figures as “shockingly bad” Vicky Redwood, UK economist at Capital Economics, said they “firmly dash any hopes that the UK had already pulled out of recession”. Getting the economy back on track “looks likely to be a long hard slog”, she said.

The TUC’s general secretary, Brendan Barber, said: “There are no green shoots here. Unemployment is growing and a recovery that brings hope to the jobless looks ever more distant.

“Immediate big spending cuts are the last thing we need. They could tip the economy into an ever deeper downturn and make the deficit worse when the tax take falls and spending on unemployment goes up.”

Meanwhile, US consumer confidence fell this month to its lowest level since April amid growing pessimism about the long-term economic outlook, especially about income and jobs.

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Budget deficit hits record June high

Total government spending in June hit £49bn, up from £44.2bn a year earlier

Opposition parties were last night piling pressure on the government over Britain’s deteriorating public finances after falling tax revenues from recession-hit companies and consumers pushed the budget deficit to its highest for any June on record.

With tax and spending at the heart of the political fight between now and the general election, the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives called on Alistair Darling to come clean about the options facing the country in the next parliament.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said public sector net borrowing – the gap between the exchequer’s tax take and its spending – stood at £13bn in June, slightly lower than City forecasts of £15.5bn, but the highest June deficit since records began in 1993. The £41.2bn borrowing in the three months to June was higher than for the entire year before the credit crunch started, and brought the total deficit over the last year up to £107bn.

The ONS said the corporation tax take from UK companies was down 14.1% in June from the same month last year, while VAT receipts fell 15.9% and income tax dropped 3.9%. While tax receipts have fallen, more and more people are claiming unemployment benefits. Government spending on social benefits has shot up 9.7% in the year to June.

The Lib Dem Treasury spokesman, Vince Cable, said the figures suggested that “even the chancellor’s eye-watering prediction of £175bn borrowing this year could be an understatement”.

He added: “With such a mismatch between government spending and receipts it is clear that in the longer term these levels of borrowing are not sustainable. If the chancellor expects to have any credibility, both with the markets and the public, he must be brutally honest about how he intends to deal with levels of borrowing. However, such a commitment to deal with the deficit cannot come from salami slicing key public services, but through an honest debate about what the state can and cannot afford to do.”

Philip Hammond, shadow chief secretary to the Treasury, said: “Gordon Brown’s debt crisis is getting worse by the month. With borrowing at record levels, why can’t he finally be straight with people and admit there will have to be public spending cuts?

“In just the last month alone, Gordon Brown has increased every person’s share of the national debt by £213 each.”

A Treasury spokesperson said: “Our plans to halve the deficit within five years are based on cautious assumptions about share prices, unemployment and the loss of output from the shock to the economy built into the budget forecasts. The latest monthly figures for public sector borrowing are in line with our forecast.”

Public sector net debt as a proportion of GDP now stands at 56.6% – the highest since records began in 1974.

David Kern, chief economist at the British Chambers of Commerce, said: “It would be wrong to tighten policy while the recession continues, but maintaining Britain’s international credibility requires a robust plan for restoring our public finances over the medium-term. This must focus on curtailing public spending across the board, while avoiding damaging measures that would harm wealthcreating businesses.”

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Guardian Daily: Vince Cable on bank reform

The Conservatives would scrap the Financial Services Authority and put the Bank of England back in control of City regulation, David Cameron has confirmed.

The Liberal Democrats’ Treasury spokesman, Vince Cable, says the FSA should be retained, but says the government has failed to introduce the radical reforms needed to avert another crash.

Legal affairs correspondent Afua Hirsch looks at the problems facing Trevor Phillips, head of the Equalities and Human Rights Commission.

John Hooper reports from Rome on the latest sex scandal facing Silvio Berlusconi, this time surrounding a tape purported to be a recording of pillow talk between the Italian prime minister and a prostitute.

John Crace roadtests a new cycle-hire scheme being pioneered in Bristol.

And Mike Selvey celebrates England’s victory over Australia in the second Test at Lord’s.


Bankers could be forced to reveal pay

Hundreds of City high-flyers could have their remuneration details published – but opposition MPs are critical

Plans to reveal the pay and bonuses of City high flyers in a new voluntary code came under attack from opposition MPs, who said the guidelines would be ignored unless they were enshrined in regulation and policed by the main financial watchdog.

A government-backed review recommended that some of the best-paid bank staff, who are currently shielded from scrutiny, should be included in annual reports as part of a wide range of measures designed to discourage risky behaviour.

The review by former investment bank boss Sir David Walker argued that exposing pay structures for highly paid staff in the City and putting an end to short-term bonuses would help prevent a repeat of the financial crisis.

Bonuses would be delayed for between three and five years and put under scrutiny by a beefed-up remuneration committee. Non-executive directors of finance companies would be required to spend more time assessing deals put forward by executive directors, Walker said.

But the report’s reliance on non-executive directors and shareholders to monitor a voluntary code was branded “inadequate” by Liberal Democrat treasury spokesman Vince Cable, who said banks should be instructed to observe the new rules by the Financial Services Authority.

Cable said: “It is clear that in banks like RBS the demigod status granted to Fred Goodwin prevented any form of credible scrutiny. So the news that bank boards may be forced to show that they can challenge a chief executive is a belated but welcome step in the right direction. But if the Walker approach is to have any value then it has to be obligatory through the FSA and not just on a voluntary basis.”

Sources close to several banks said there was a general acceptance that the Walker rules would be endorsed by the government in time for details of staff pay to appear in next year’s annual reports. According to City sources, one high street bank paid more than 200 staff more than its chief executive. Walker said he wanted the rules to apply to all banks operating in the City, including the largest US banks.

The review will reach chancellor Alistair Darling at a time when several banks have begun setting aside massive bonuses. Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan have reported record profits for the first half of the year.

Several MPs, already concerned at the massive taxpayer funds used to bail out Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group, have signed an early day motion signalling their concern at the return of huge bonuses at City institutions.

Independent MP Dai Davies sponsored the motion, which urged a rethink at Goldman Sachs. The Wall Street bank could be in a position to offer total pay and bonuses of more than $22bn (£13.3bn), equating to an average payout of $770,000 to each of its 29,400 employees. The motion said it believes “such obscene profits are made by encouraging the very reckless risk-taking that brought down or severely damaged several major banks, and run counter to the restraint urged by the chancellor.”

Goldman, RBS and other banks operating in the UK argue they have overhauled their bonus structures with a greater emphasis on long-term rewards, but continue to face criticism that both the size and structure of their bonuses encourages risky behaviour.

Walker said the pay of individual staff below board level who earn large sums would be revealed in the form of pay bands in the annual report, though names would be kept secret. The remuneration committee would have the power to overrule the board if it believed the level of pay or bonuses encouraged risky behaviour.

He also said the role of non-executive directors should be strengthened to make up for the failures of banks prior to the credit crisis. A risk committee at board level would also oversee the policies of the bank and assess whether they could undermine its strength.

Walker said: “These proposals are designed to improve the professionalism and diligence of bank boards, increasing the importance of challenge in the board environment. If this means that boards operate in a somewhat less collegial way than in the past, that will be a small price to pay for better governance.”

His proposals include:

• Board-level risk committees chaired by a non-executive director.

• Risk committees to have power to scrutinise, and if necessary block, big transactions.

• More power for remuneration committees to scrutinise company-wide pay.

• Remuneration committees to oversee pay of highly paid executives not on the board.

• Significant deferred element in bonus schemes for all highly paid executives.

• Increased public disclosure about the pay of such executives.

• Chair of remuneration committee to face re-election if his or her report gets less than 75% approval.

Walker said that while shareholders largely encouraged risk-taking by banks, they would need to take in the future a more active role in restraining banks such activity.

“Failures in governance in banks and other financial institutions made the financial crisis much worse. Many boards inadequately understood the type and scale of risks they were running and failed to hold the executive to high standards of sustainable performance. Bonus schemes contributed to excessive risk-taking by rewarding short-term performance. And shareholders failed to exercise proper stewardship,” he said.

“Taken alongside the arrangements being proposed by the FSA, the recommendations on remuneration are as tough or tougher than anything to be found elsewhere in the world. An important and urgent challenge is to promote adoption of similar approaches internationally.

“These recommendations should bring substantial improvement in the governance of banks. They will not guarantee that failure will be avoided in future but will greatly mitigate the risk.”

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Goldman Sachs set for big bonuses

• Investment bank delivers profits of $3.44bn
• Big bonuses likely to be paid to 29,400 Goldman Sachs staff

The investment bank Goldman Sachs delivered a clear signal that the good times are returning on Wall Street by milking a recovery in financial markets to generate profits of $3.44bn (£2.12bn), raising the prospect of average pay packages of as much as $900,000 for its employees.

Goldman’s second-quarter earnings, which amounted to $38m per day, were up 65% on 2008 and confirmed the US bank’s status as one of the stand-out winners from the credit crunch which paralysed the financial industry for much of last year.

The firm’s revenue of $13.76bn was the highest in its 140-year history. Its success on the trading floor is likely to translate into record bonuses, to the dismay of critics who view runaway compensation as a key factor contributing to the global economic meltdown.

Goldman’s chief financial officer, David Viniar, put the bank’s higher profits down to “basic blocking and tackling”. Speaking on a conference call, Viniar said Goldman had done “very well” in its core operation trading stocks, shares, debt and other financial products: “It was very widespread, day after day, client-facing business in very liquid markets and very liquid products.”

The bank’s trading and principal investments division saw revenue almost doubled with a 93% leap to $10.78bn. This easily offset a drop in income from Goldman’s financial advisory arm, which was hampered by a dearth in corporate takeovers.

Viniar said the bank had a “very, very strong culture of risk management” and had secured loyalty from its clients: “At the depths of the crisis, we were there trying to provide them with liquidity and with the services they wanted.”

During the quarter, Goldman dedicated 49% of its revenue to paying its staff – amounting to a compensation fund of $6.65bn, or $226,000 for each of its 29,200 staff. If the bank’s bottom line prospers to the same degree for the rest of the year, employees could end up with average annual pay of more than $900,000 – an increase of nearly 150% on last year’s figure of $363,000.

Such payouts have aroused huge controversy. In London, where Goldman employs 5,500 staff, some 38 MPs have signed an early day motion noting the prospect of the bank’s bonuses “with concern” and calling on the government to intervene over vast payouts in the financial industry.

The Liberal Democrat treasury spokesman, Vince Cable, accused Goldman executives of having short memories: “In ten months, they’ve gone from taking a begging bowl to the US government to paying out massive bonuses. If we are to have stability in the finance sector, we must see pay restraint in all banks, irrespective of which country they are based in.”

Goldman’s success has generated its fair share of detractors. Critics point out that the bank was the biggest counterparty in financial insurance policies to the insurer AIG and that its collateral calls contributed to the US company’s collapse, requiring AIG to seek $150bn of government aid.

Furthermore, Goldman itself received $10bn from the US government’s troubled asset relief fund, which it paid back last month to avoid any further caps on dividends or remuneration. The firm converted to a ‘bank holding company’ last year, allowing it to take retail deposits, as the business model of a standalone Wall Street bank came under threat.

A leading US labour organisation, the Service Employees International Union, said Goldman’s pay practices are a strong argument for root and branch change in Wall Street’s compensation policy to end a culture of rewarding bankers for taking risks.

Stephen Lerner, director of the SEIU’s financial reform campaign said: “They have some kind of moral and economic amnesia. After we bail them out with tens of billions in taxpayers’ funds, they go back to exactly the same practices as before.”

Defending the bank’s compensation practices, Viniar said Goldman had a long established “pay for performance” policy and pointed out that staff saw a sharp drop in payouts when times were tougher in 2008. But he said: “If we do perform well, our employees will be rewarded appropriately.”

Analysts say that Wall Street trading houses face less vibrant competition after the demise of rivals such as Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers, making it slightly easier to gain a financial edge. Gerard Cassidy, a banking analyst at RBC Capital Markets, said Goldman’s brand, viewed as trustworthy, and its ability to attract top talent contribute to the firm’s success.

“The economy’s not out of the woods yet but I would say the dark days of Wall Street are behind,” said Cassidy. “In the first quarter, we saw the first rays of sunshine.This quarter, we’ve got confirmation that the sun is shining brighter and that it will continue to do so as the economy recovers.”

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