Brexit is no reason to radically alter British financial regulation and regulators should not be forced to water down rules to boost London's competitiveness, or stray from global standards, a UK parliamentary committee report said on Thursday.
Britain's
departure from the European Union largely cut off its huge financial
sector from the bloc and the country is reviewing rules inherited from
the EU amid calls from banks for greater emphasis on keeping City of
London globally competitive.
The report, however, advocates caution.
"Simplifying
financial regulation and tailoring it appropriately to the UK market
must be approached with care, and without compromising regulatory
independence," a report from parliament's Treasury Select Committee
said.
The finance ministry should be "sparing" in the use of its new power to require regulators to review rules.
"We
will remain alert for any evidence that regulators are coming under
undue pressure from the Treasury to inappropriately weaken regulatory
standards."
Financial
services minister John Glen has said there will be no "bonfire of
regulations" or ditching of global standards, but has proposed giving
regulators a secondary objective of keeping finance globally competitive
and aiding economic growth.
The
new objective should only include aiding growth because the pursuit of
competitiveness risked weakening Britain's strong regulatory standards,
the report said.
Regulators
should speed up authorisations of new firms such as fintech and crypto,
and report annually on how they promote financial inclusion and help
vulnerable consumers, the report recommended.
Regulators
could try allowing big financial firms to experiment with new products
as long as they set aside more capital to compensate consumers if they
go wrong, it added.
Large
banks and insurers can use internal models to determine capital
requirements, while smaller firms must use more conservative rules set
by regulators.
The
report said the Bank of England should consider reducing this advantage
for big firms to strengthen competition and check whether internal
models actually cover risks sufficiently.
Reuters
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