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Collateral damage: Martien Lubberink on how the war on ‘woke banking’ could backfire on New Zealand

Banking / opinion
Collateral damage: Martien Lubberink on how the war on ‘woke banking’ could backfire on New Zealand
woke
Getty Images.

By Martien Lubberink*

It would be hard to think of an industry less obviously “woke” than banking, but that’s how coalition partner NZ First has characterised certain practices within the finance sector.

The party’s tortuously titled Financial Markets (Conduct of Institutions) Amendment (Duty to Provide) Amendment Bill – dubbed the “woke banking” bill – takes aim at efforts to build sustainability concepts into investment practices.

Known as the “environmental, social and governance (ESG) framework”, such policies are designed to guide how a bank manages risks and opportunities beyond basic profit and loss.

NZ First’s bill seeks to ensure no New Zealand business can be denied banking services unless the decision is grounded in law. Its proponents argue it will prevent ESG standards from perpetuating “woke ideology” in the banking sector, driven by what they describe as “unelected, globalist, climate radicals”.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has supported the bill’s aims, recently calling it “utterly unacceptable” that petrol stations and mines were being denied banking services due to banks’ commitment to climate change goals.

Coalition partner ACT similarly called for the end of “banking wokery”. And last week the Finance and Expenditure Committee announced an extension of its inquiry into banking competition to include, among other issues, the “debanking of legitimate sectors.

Risk management isn’t ‘woke’

Much of this is largely politically performative, however. A broader international trend has for, some time now, seen financial institutions increasingly aligning their lending practices with ESG criteria.

In Europe, for example, data from the European Banking Authority show banks have halved their exposures to mining firms since 2020, reflecting that global shift towards sustainability and risk management.

This is about more than “woke” agendas and is unlikely to reverse, given current global efforts to decarbonise. Encouraging or forcing banks to invest in carbon-emitting industries introduces financial risk. If those assets lose value, it constitutes irresponsible lending.

While the current US administration may be embracing fossil fuel industries, consumer and investor demand for sustainable policies is still strong. When banks such as the BNZ prepare for an orderly exit from declining industries, they are simply engaging in risk management.

Banks also manage regulatory risk. While the current government may enact the bill and force banks to invest in carbon-emitting industries, a future government could reverse that policy. This undermines long-term investment strategies.

Regulatory uncertainty

There is also a danger New Zealand is perceived internationally as not being serious about business and investment. In particular, the prime minister’s pressure on bank lending policies cuts across his stated commitment to the Paris Agreement on climate change.

The resulting regulatory uncertainty is counterproductive: it potentially deters international investors at a time when the government aims to attract foreign investment.

Ultimately, if bank lending policies lead to poor outcomes, it is ordinary New Zealanders who will likely bear the costs through higher interest rates or even bank failures.

In its eagerness to boost lending, the government is also encroaching on the Reserve Bank’s territory by directing it to prioritise competition, including reviewing risk weightings and capital thresholds (designed to build buffers against failure) for new entrants to the market.

But history shows that before the 2007-2009 global financial crisis, similar bank-friendly initiatives – often labelled “principles-based” – led to bad debt accumulation and increased economic vulnerability.

Institutional failure

The shift towards what we might call populist banking policies is not confined to New Zealand. Globally, there is a declining political interest in financial stability and prudential regulation.

For example, agreement on the “Basel III” reforms – developed in response to the global financial crisis and aimed at strengthening the regulation, supervision and risk management of banks – will likely be delayed by the Trump administration.

This will have ripple effects in Europe, Britain and the rest of the world, signalling a softening of global capital requirements. As Erik Thedéen, chair of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, described this:

Shaving off a few basis points of capital will not unlock a wave of new lending, but it will weaken your resilience. More generally, being well capitalised is a competitive advantage for banks and their shareholders. It ensures they can continue to grow and invest in profitable projects across the financial cycle.

Politicians need to be very careful when interfering with bank supervision policies in general. They risk undermining the independence of crucial institutions, with real consequences.

Last year’s Nobel Prize for economics went to Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson and James A. Robinson for their “studies of how institutions are formed and affect prosperity”. Their warning is that institutional failure can lead to the failure of nations.

A resilient banking system

While New Zealand isn’t in such imminent danger, political leaders need to be aware that populist appeals to certain voter segments can lead to policies that undermine the banking system and economic growth, and disproportionately affect the most vulnerable.

As Stelios Haji-Ioannou, founder of low-cost airline EasyJet, once remarked: “if you think safety is expensive, try an accident”.

New Zealand needs to focus on policies that promote long-term financial stability, enhance productivity and sustainable economic growth. Globally, there needs to be a recommitment to prudential regulation to ensure the lessons of the global financial crisis are not forgotten.

Only by doing so can we build a resilient banking system that serves the interests of all, not just a privileged few.The Conversation


*Martien Lubberink, Associate Professor of Accounting and Capital, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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9 Comments

Let them go "woke", just make sure they extend it to all emission and pollution inducing industries.

Debank mining for EV batteries, debank plastic production, debank toxic chemicals, debank obsolescence, debank wasteful building practices, etc etc.

Mwaahhh 

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You just read the headline, didn’t you?

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Nup

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just make sure they extend it to all emission and pollution inducing industries.

As I’m sure you’re aware, that would mean investing in nothing. Practically everything humans do that isn’t re-wilding has an environmental cost, but that doesn’t mean we can’t swap terrible practices for less-harmful ones.

The point of ESG is not to withdraw from all industries that pollute, but to manage risk by withdrawing from the worst ones. 

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So what the bill attempts to achieve - is that one can't be denied banking unless the decision is grounded in law. And there is no sound argument against this in the article, only that the proposed regulation may have unintended consequences. I am by no means a fan of Gloriavale, and no politician of sound mind would use them as an example, but banks can just decide not to offer financial services in a structure they created - that are absolutely required to survive - based on their own internal policies? Where exactly does this end? And it is clear to see that the initial targets of debanking are clearly ethical or woke decisions, not the highest risk like the banks are subsequently claiming.

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A rational sensible take.

Wait until these “woke” bankers and their shareholders decide these businesses are not only risky but the owners of many are …… well la la.

The next unwoke bunch providing finance, whoever they are as they seem to staying away or leaving NZ, might be even harder I would suggest.

Be very careful what you wish for.

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Given that nearly all banks are involved in criminal activities of one form or another, they will find a way around any laws...or like trump, just ignore them.

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Woke 1.0 Awake to Racism

Woke 2.0 Awake to other stuff

Woke 3.0 A wacking impliment to hit kindness with

Woke 4.0 Anything you dont like but cant use your words to describe

Woke 5.0 interminable whining

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A very confused article - "New Zealand needs to focus on policies that promote long-term financial stability, enhance productivity and sustainable economic growth. " -  this is the polar opposite to supporting debanking off the back of something as unscientific and unsustainable, likely fraudulent and just downright hypocritical as the Paris agreement.

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