Corporate Europe Observatory

Exposing the power of corporate lobbying in the EU

Letter from CEO to Mario Draghi

  • Dansk
  • Nederlands
  • English
  • Français
  • Deutsch
  • Ελληνικά
  • Italiano
  • Portuguese
  • Español
  • Svenska
Printer-friendly versionSend by emailPDF version

Letter to the President of the European Central Bank Mario Draghi concerning his membership of 'the Group of Thirty', a lobbying vehicle on banking regulation with CEO's from big banks in its membership. The letter urges Mario Draghi to step down, and quotes the rules on the independence of the ECB.

 

Dear Mr. Draghi.

I am writing to you on behalf of Corporate Europe Observatory in connection with your new role, following the change of presidents at the European Central Bank.  Our attention was drawn to both your and Jean-Claude Trichet’s membership of ’the Group of Thirty’. We find this membership  deeply concerning and believe it may be  in breach of the Treaty.

As you know, the institution you now lead is supposedly independent from any outside interference. This is stipulated in article 130 of the Treaty that reads: “When exercising the powers and carrying out the tasks and duties conferred upon them by the Treaties and the Statute of the ESCB and of the ECB, neither the European Central Bank, nor a national central bank, nor any member of their decision-making bodies shall seek or take instructions from Union institutions, bodies, offices or agencies, from any government of a Member State or from any other body.”

Over the years, this article has been highlighted on several occasions when the ECB has attempted to stave off attempts by member state governments to influence the decisions of the Bank. The now former president of the Bank defended this principle with zeal.

However, as it’s clear from the Treaty, that independence also includes independence from other bodies. And the private financial sector and its representatives are prominent among the bodies that could exert undue influence over the bank. Consequently, the Bank and its president have an obligation to keep an appropriate distance from anything resembling  private financial sector lobby vehicles.

We believe you as president would be negligent, should you decide – as did the former president of the Bank – to retain your membership of ‘the Group of Thirty’.  We give three reasons for this.

Firstly, ‘The Group of Thirty’ is as a joint endeavour of bankers from the public and private sector. Prominent among its members are chief executives and advisors from Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan Chase International and BNP Paribas. When the group presents itself to the public, it is usually Jacob Frenkel from JP Morgan Chase International who acts as its spokesperson. The Group has the characteristics of a lobbying vehicle for private financial interests.

Secondly, it’s clear from the group’s mission statement  that the aim is to influence the debate on regulation of the financial sector worldwide. On more than one occasion, we’ve seen the Group of Thirty come out in support of the objectives of the banking lobby, for instance on Basel II.

Thirdly there’s the opaque nature of the activities of the members. We have no way of knowing the details of your involvement, since the meetings of the members are confidential. Information on what kind of discussions take place, and whether the members commit to certain lines of action is not accessible to the public.

We believe that any president of the Bank has to make it absolutely clear that he or she is not under the influence of the financial lobby at any time. In particular at this dramatic point in the history of the EU, with the eurocrisis and an ailing banking sector –recipients of trillions of euro in aid – it is completely unacceptable if doubt can be cast on the independence from the financial lobby of the Bank’s president.

We therefore strongly urge you to withdraw from the Group of Thirty.

Best regards,

Kenneth Haar

Corporate Europe Observatory

CEO-article on The Group of Thirty: click here

 Dear Mr. Draghi.I am writing to you on behalf of Corporate Europe Observatory in connection with your new role, following the change of presidents at the European Central Bank.  Our attention was drawn to both your and Jean-Claude Trichet’s membership of ’the Group of Thirty’. We find this membership  deeply concerning and believe it may be  in breach of the Treaty.As you know, the institution you now lead is supposedly independent from any outside interference. This is stipulated in article 130 of the Treaty that reads: “When exercising the powers and carrying out the tasks and duties conferred upon them by the Treaties and the Statute of the ESCB and of the ECB, neither the European Central Bank, nor a national central bank, nor any member of their decision-making bodies shall seek or take instructions from Union institutions, bodies, offices or agencies, from any government of a Member State or from any other body.”Over the years, this article has been highlighted on several occasions when the ECB has attempted to stave off attempts by member state governments to influence the decisions of the Bank. The now former president of the Bank defended this principle with zeal.However, as it’s clear from the Treaty, that independence also includes independence from other bodies. And the private financial sector and its representatives are prominent among the bodies that could exert undue influence over the bank. Consequently, the Bank and its president have an obligation to keep an appropriate distance from anything resembling  private financial sector lobby vehicles.We believe you as president would be negligent, should you decide – as did the former president of the Bank – to retain your membership of ‘the Group of Thirty’.  We give three reasons for this. Firstly, ‘The Group of Thirty’ is as a joint endeavour of bankers from the public and private sector. Prominent among its members are chief executives and advisors from Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan Chase International and BNP Paribas. When the group presents itself to the public, it is usually Jacob Frenkel from JP Morgan Chase International who acts as its spokesperson. The Group has the characteristics of a lobbying vehicle for private financial interests.Secondly, it’s clear from the group’s mission statement  that the aim is to influence the debate on regulation of the financial sector worldwide. On more than one occasion, we’ve seen the Group of Thirty come out in support of the objectives of the banking lobby, for instance on Basel II.Thirdly there’s the opaque nature of the activities of the members. We have no way of knowing the details of your involvement, since the meetings of the members are confidential. Information on what kind of discussions take place, and whether the members commit to certain lines of action is not accessible to the public. We believe that any president of the Bank has to make it absolutely clear that he or she is not under the influence of the financial lobby at any time. In particular at this dramatic point in the history of the EU, with the eurocrisis and an ailing banking sector –recipients of trillions of euro in aid – it is completely unacceptable if doubt can be cast on the independence from the financial lobby of the Bank’s president.We therefore strongly urge you to withdraw from the Group of Thirty. Best regards,Kenneth HaarCorporate Europe ObservatoryCEO-article on The Group of Thirty: click here
 

Comments

Submitted by Oscar Kjellberg (not verified) on

Mr Draghi must have been so busy that he forgot about this membership of his. Also those who appointed him must have forgot about article 130 of the Treaty. Why Mr Trichet and those who, at that time appointed him, did not bother I cannot understand.

I thank you, Mr Haar, for this reminder to Mr Draghi and those who appoint him (how could they miss this). We want Mr Draghi to be completely free of the influence of the Group of Thirty.

Regards,

Oscar Kjellberg

Submitted by Un parmi d'autres (not verified) on

Se retirer du groupe des Trente, soit... mais M. Draghi n'est pas censé ignorer sa propre loi et dans ce cas la sanction devrait être la démission de la Présidence de la Banque centrale européenne.

Similar entries

New ECB President must leave private bankers' lobby group

Campaigners today called on the new president of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, to cut his ties with an elite banking lobby group in order to protect the independence of the Central Bank.

Draghi and the Group of Thirty - an intro

Corporate Europe Observatory has demanded that the President of the European Central Bank Mario Draghi leaves the ‘Group of Thirty’, a club of central bankers and chief executives from private banks. What is the case about?

Complaint to the European Central Bank

To the Executive Board of the European Central Bank
Concerning the President’s membership of the Group of Thirty.

This letter is to complain about the about the European Central Bank’s response to my letter (on behalf of Corporate Europe Observatory) about ECB President Draghi’s membership of the Group of Thirty which failed to adequately address the concerns I raised.

Would you bank on them?

Why we shouldn't trust the EU's financial "wise men" 

The President and the private finance club

This month the EU Ombudsman is expected to reach a conclusion on Corporate Europe Observatory’s complaint about the European Central Bank and its President Mario Draghi. It centers on his continuing membership of the Group of Thirty (G30), which violates the Bank's own ethics rules.

Pages


The Brussels Business: Who runs the EU?

Corporate Europe Observatory

Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) is a research and campaign group working to expose and challenge the privileged access and influence enjoyed by corporations and their lobby groups in EU policy making.

Read more

Creative Commons License
All content on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Corporate Europe Forum