
LONDON 鈥 Britain鈥檚 regulators can be slow, inefficient and unpredictable, raising costs and slowly damaging the financial sector鈥檚 global competitiveness, industry body TheCityUK said in a report.聽
Complex, opaque and slow authorizations, such as for a new chief executive or a new product, can discourage growth and investment, the report published on Thursday said.聽
It said The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Bank of England鈥檚 Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) were taking steps to speed up authorizations, but further action was needed.聽
The report was based on interviews with 20 industry leaders and a survey of 40 firms, with 83% of respondents saying Britain鈥檚 international competitiveness was slowly being damaged by regulatory inefficiencies.聽
It recommends that regulators are 鈥渃ommercially aware鈥 of the challenges the firms they regulate are facing, publish better performance data on authorizations, enhance communication with firms, adopt a 鈥渄igital-first鈥 approach and train authorization staff better.聽
鈥淭he UK is one of the world鈥檚 leading international financial centers, but our competitors are biting at our heels. Complacency is not an option,鈥 TheCityUK Chief Executive Miles Celic said.聽
Britain is pushing through many reforms to financial rules to help the City of London remain globally competitive after being largely cut off from the European Union by Brexit, ushering in new competition from centers like Amsterdam and Paris.聽
TheCityUK said it welcomes the so-called Edinburgh reforms to boost London as a global financial center.聽
鈥淪uccessfully updating the rules also depends on the referee implementing them in the same spirit and with the same energy,鈥 Mr. Celic said.聽
The Bank of England said it recognized the need to improve the timeliness of approving senior managers in particular and was taking steps in line with many of the recommendations.聽
鈥淭his report supports our decision to invest heavily last year heavily in staff and technology, resulting in our pending caseload falling by 50 per cent, even as our workload and level of scrutiny of firms increases,鈥 the FCA said.聽
鈥淲e have already announced that we will publish more metrics about our performance soon and will shortly be testing automated application forms to make applications quicker to assess.鈥澛
Britain鈥檚 finance ministry is due to launch in coming weeks a public consultation on rules for vetting senior managers at banks and insurers, with a focus on streamlining the process. 鈥斅Reuters


