Baroness Sherlock
Main Page: Baroness Sherlock (Labour - Life peer)Department Debates - View all Baroness Sherlock's debates with the HM Treasury
(12 years, 1 month ago)
Lords ChamberMy Lords, the series of amendments in my name are among those from Amendments 187E to 187T, and are all concerned with the interaction between the Financial Ombudsman Service and the new regulatory bodies under the new order set out in the Bill. I start by saying that I have been extremely impressed with the success of the Financial Ombudsman Service and the work that it has done. When it was set up, I was slightly concerned that its brief went beyond the law, but it has established a very successful record.
I shall go through these amendments. Amendment 187E seeks to require the Financial Ombudsman Service to exercise its functions in a way that is consistent with the FCA’s strategic and operational objectives, and with its regulatory principles—on the same sort of basis on which the Legal Services Ombudsman is subject to a high-level requirement to operate within the regulatory framework for legal services.
Amendments 187F through to 187L reflect some reservations about the new requirement on the FOS to publish reports of all its determinations. While supporting transparency in key FOS decisions, these amendments are designed to focus on more purposeful disclosures, which would be more beneficial for consumers and firms than the necessity to publish all decisions. A more balanced and focused approach to the legislation should give the FOS the statutory option, rather than the statutory obligation, to publish its determinations. This option should be balanced by safeguards for a firm to challenge publications which it considers inappropriate.
Amendment 187N seeks to make the FCA responsible for responding to regulatory issues with wider implications arising from complaints, while Amendment 187P seeks to require the FCA to conduct strategic high-level oversight of the Financial Ombudsman Service to ensure that it operates in a way that is consistent with the FCA’s objectives. In particular, to strengthen the accountability of the FOS the FCA should conduct regular reviews of its overall operations, policies and procedures. This would not and should not compromise the operational independence of the ombudsman when adjudicating on individual cases.
Amendment 187Q seeks to set out that the FCA should set out a clear process for decision-making on cases requiring regulatory or legal clarification. Amendment 187S intends that the FCA, not the FOS, should make the scheme rules. The legislation should more clearly define a fair and reasonable test, and the ombudsman should be required to take into account the FCA’s objectives, laws and regulations in force at the time of the complaint. Finally, Amendment 187T would require the FOS to be obliged to consult stakeholders before it issues guidance or technical notes about its procedures and its approach to handling common categories of cases.
In addressing this group of amendments, I remind the House of my declared interest as the senior independent director of the Financial Ombudsman Service. I hope that the House will bear with me while I go through the many amendments of the noble Lord, Lord Flight, beginning with Amendment 187E. I am concerned that this amendment would begin to compromise the independence of the ombudsman service. The ombudsman’s responsibility is to resolve complaints informally and promptly by considering what is fair and reasonable in respect of each individual complaint. That role is very different and distinct from that of the regulator and it feels important to all concerned that the two are kept distinct.
In making decisions, the ombudsman is already required by the rules to take into account a series of things: the law and regulations, the regulator’s rules, the guidance and standards, the codes of practice, and good industry practice at the time. In that way it is for the regulator to interpret its objectives and for the ombudsman to reflect this interpretation by taking into account the rules and guidance which the regulator publishes. I therefore do not think that this change is necessary, but I will go further and say that it potentially risks the unintended consequence of requiring the ombudsman to interpret the regulatory objectives of the FCA directly. Given that the nature of those proposed regulatory objectives is very wide—going, for example, up to the competition objective—it does not seem to me desirable that the ombudsman service should be put into the position of having to interpret them.
Those comments relate also to Amendment 187P, which seeks to change the relationship between the ombudsman service and the FCA in a way that again risks undermining the model of an independent ombudsman service. The ombudsman should clearly be accountable, and I welcome the provisions already in the Bill to strengthen that accountability: for example, by making formal requirements which the ombudsman has already undertaken voluntarily. The ombudsman will, for example, become subject to audit by the National Audit Office—something that it has embraced by going ahead early and voluntarily asking the NAO to come in and do an audit. However, to move to a compulsory annual review on top would involve significant diversion of effort, both by the FCA and the ombudsman service.
Related issues emerge in Amendment 187S, which would give the regulator the power to decide not just which complaints the ombudsman should decide, as now, but how the ombudsman should go about doing this, which would undermine the operational independence of the ombudsman service as an alternative to the courts. The regulator already determines the jurisdiction of the ombudsman—that is, which complaints can be considered—but the ombudsman service makes its own rules, which set out how it will deal with cases. Those are its own internal procedures, covering, for example, criteria for dismissing cases, evidential requirements, delegation by ombudsmen, rules about case fees and any costs rules. The ombudsman service is required by FiSMA to consult those likely to be affected and to have regard to any representations made by them. The rules are, of course, already subject to approval by the FSA and will be by the FCA, but deciding how to resolve cases is a crucial feature of the ombudsman’s independence, and that must be retained.
A slew of amendments, Amendments 187F to 187L—the noble Lord, Lord Flight, has been prolific—relate to the publication of ombudsman decisions. I am concerned that their effect would be to undermine the main advantage of the publication of decisions, which, it seems to me, is to share a fuller picture—a complete picture, indeed—of the cases the ombudsman deals with and his approach to resolving them. As drafted, the Bill provides a very clear obligation on the ombudsman to publish decisions unless there are very good reasons not to do so. That clarity is very welcome. The ombudsman has talked to stakeholders about how he might go about doing something such as this should Parliament decide to go down that road. Many stakeholders were very supportive of the proposed approach to publish all decisions. In my view, transparency has benefits for all involved; it can help to increase the accountability of the ombudsman, but it can also mean that cases that could be wasteful may be diverted right at the outset.
Amendment 187N also causes me concern for a different reason; it might risk challenging the work of the ombudsman to provide a prompt as well as an informal resolution of complaints, which is an important safety net for consumers. If the aim of the amendment—perhaps the noble Lord, Lord Flight, could clarify this—is to enable the regulator to deal with issues that have wider implications, it is unnecessary because the regulator is already able to do this by using Section 404 powers under FiSMA to impose a redress scheme which the ombudsman is required to follow. Of course, all the FiSMA organisations work well together anyway. The ombudsman regularly meets the FSA, the OFT and the compensation service to discuss emerging issues that could develop into risks, and wider implications can thereby be tackled. Actually, many cases could have wider implications, so if the legislation says that any case with wider implications means that all similar cases should be put on hold, that could be of significant detriment to consumers by introducing potentially massive delays into the system.
My Lords, I suspect that everyone in this House has been plagued by the various attempts by the claims industry to get us to pass over all kinds of personal details. That worries me. Anecdotally, I have heard reports of people who responded positively to one of these messages and handed over their credit card details. They then found themselves being charged without realising that they were getting themselves into that situation. We have talked to various institutions, many of which say that half the claims presented to them are from people who have never had any relationship with them whatever. It was entirely a fishing expedition. At a time when we want our banks to focus on appropriate lending to individuals and small businesses, which they are all struggling to do effectively, to have the complete distraction and cost associated with keeping this abusive industry afloat is surely unacceptable to all of us.
I support in particular the comment made by my noble friend Lord Kennedy at the end of his contribution. He asked the Minister whether he would meet with my noble friend and other interested Members to consider if not this then what other action can and should be taken. I think that the House would be particularly interested to hear the Minister’s response on that.
It seems quite obvious that as a market the CMC sector simply is not working. Not only are significant numbers of people being pressured essentially into doing things which they do not want to do, but there appears to be no price competition in the market at all. All the evidence shows that consumers are just as likely to use a claims management company which charges 40% as one that charges 15% of any money that they might get back. Many simply are not aware that they could do it for themselves for free by going directly to the ombudsman.
If the Minister is not minded to go in that direction, will he tell the House two things? First, what would the Government be able to do very soon that would have a significant impact on targeting in particular the minority of claims management companies that are behaving very badly? Secondly, will he at least agree to meet interested Peers to discuss that matter very soon?
My Lords, I share the concerns behind the amendment about the activities of CMCs in relation to financial services products. Like all noble Lords, I have been approached by them with the most spurious and ridiculous arguments about why I should give them details about my financial affairs in return for some often unspecified benefit. We start off by sharing that concern.
I would be more sympathetic to the amendment if I did not think that the Government were already doing something about it. I am very happy to meet noble Lords who would like to discuss the matter, along with colleagues from MoJ, to see what might be done to expedite effective action. But I do not think that it is necessary or appropriate to expect the FOS to step in as a quasi-regulator and make its own conduct rules. The role of the FOS should be to act as an independent dispute resolution service and not to act as a quasi-regulator of CMCs. It is just the wrong organisation to do that.
As I have said, I am sympathetic to what the noble Lord is seeking to achieve and I give an undertaking to set up a meeting to discuss it further. On that basis, I hope that the noble Lord can withdraw his amendment.