St Paul’s Institute yesterday released their long-awaited ‘Value and Values’ report, based on a survey of 515 financial professionals working in the City. The report is downloadable here.
The report was put together with the guidance of the Rev Giles Fraser, the Institute’s director, who resigned as canon chancellor at St Paul’s Cathedral when it seemed likely that legal action leading to forced eviction would be taken against the Occupy anti-corporate greed and injustice encampment on its doorstep.
The publication of ‘Value and Values’ was then controversially postponed, amidst accusations that the Cathedral was bowing to pressure from financiers and bankers.
A press release from St Paul’s Institute states:
Professionals in the Financial Services sector believe that City bond traders, FTSE Chief Executives and stock brokers are paid too much, teachers are paid too little and that there is too great a gap between rich and poor in the UK, according to a survey carried out by ComRes on behalf of St Paul’s Institute.
Marking the 25th anniversary of the financial ‘Big Bang’, the survey also indicates that the majority of Financial Services professionals do not know that the London Stock Exchange’s motto is ‘My Word is My Bond’ and many think that deregulation of financial markets results in less ethical behaviour.
The survey of 515 professionals working in the Financial Services sector in London carried out online by ComRes between 30th August and 12th September 2011 also found that:
· The majority of FS professional think that bankers, stock brokers, FTSE 100 chief executives, lawyers and city bond traders are paid too much.
· ‘Salary and bonuses’ are the most important motivation for professionals working in the FS sector in London for 2 in 3 (64%) participants. ‘Enjoyment of the work’ comes a distant second.
· 75% agree that there is too great a gap between rich and poor.
· Only 14% of respondents correctly indicated the motto of the London Stock Exchange (“My Word is My Bond”).
· Many are not familiar with what happened after the financial ‘Big Bang’:
1 in 3 disagree that the financial markets were deregulated
More than two-thirds (69%) did not know that the financial Big Bang happened in 1986.
· The majority of respondents feel that their companies maintain high ethical standards that are broadly in line with their personal moral standards.
Commenting on the survey Revd Michael Hampel, Canon Precentor of St Paul’s Cathedral, said: ”Action is a crucial goal of the protest camp outside St Paul’s Cathedral. We hope that the telling findings of this report can provide a solid foundation for future engagement and highlight issues where action might be of mutual concern for all sides of the debate.”
This report can be downloaded in full here.
http://www.stpaulsinstitute.org.uk/dialogue/st-pauls-institute/article/2011/nov/07/-value-and-values-perceptions-of-ethics-in