Professionalism and Ethics in Banking Flashcards
What are three examples of employee misconduct?
- manipulating interbank lending rates
- mis-selling insurance
- failing to stop their banks being used for money laundering.
What is the Chartered Banker Insitute?
The Chartered Banker Institute’s strategic purpose is to lead the re-professionalisation of UK banking, and to play a significant role in professionalising banking internationally, with a view to rebuilding confidence and trust in banks and bankers, and restoring pride in the banking profession.
In 2017, the Institute and Nottingham University Business School’s Centre for Risk, Banking and Financial Services designed a survey to gauge professional pride in the banking sector. This research, which was repeated in 2018, offers new insight into levels of professional pride.
What is the Chartered Banker Professional Standards Board (CB:PSB)?
In 2011, the Chartered Banker Institute set up the Chartered Banker Professional Standards Board (CB:PSB), the purpose of which was “…to enhance customer confidence in every banker in every bank in the UK, by setting out the professional values, attitudes and behaviour expected of bankers in the Chartered Banker Code of Professional Conduct…developing and implementing professional standards for bankers, and providing pathways for bankers to meet and maintain relevant professional qualifications” (Chartered Banker Institute, 2019).
What are the aims of the CB:PSB?
The CB:PSB’s aims were to:
- develop a series of professional standards to support the ethical awareness, customer focus and competence of those working in the banking industry
- facilitate industry and public awareness and recognition of standards in banking
- establish mechanisms for the implementation, monitoring and enforcement of the standards
- help build, over time, greater public confidence and trust in individuals, institutions and the banking industry overall, and enhance pride in the banking profession.
What are the Banking Standards Board?
In its drive for professionalism, the Institute also welcomes the Banking Standards Board’s (BSB) Principles for Strengthening Professionalism which allow member firms and others in the sector to reference their own policies and practices against a set of aspirational guiding principles.
What is professionalism?
Professionalism is “…the competence or skill expected of a professional”.
What is acting in the Public Interest?
Acting in the public interest is usually about the professional’s duties and responsibilities to make decisions and act in a way that promotes the collective well-being of the community served by the profession. The community may include customers, employers, employees, investors, the business and financial community, and other key stakeholders who rely on the work of the profession.
What are the codes of Practice, Conduct and Ethics?
A code of practice, conduct or ethics is a set of written rules or standards which explains how people working in a particular profession or organisation should behave. Members of a professional body are required to commit to its professional code. If a member breaches this code, they could be subject to disciplinary action, and may even be prevented from working in that profession in future.
What are the two ways in which codes can be described?
Rules based: A rules-based code clearly defines the rules that are expected to be followed. It is prescriptive in the sense that it sets out details of what members of a professional body or employees of a company can and cannot do. It therefore focuses on literal interpretation, leaving little room for misunderstanding. A disadvantage of a rules-based code is that situations are likely to arise for which no guidance is given so the individual would have no clear rule to follow.
Principles Based: A principles-based code sets out broad, high-level principles or values that guide the behaviours and decisions of the members of a professional body or company employees, thereby avoiding the need to prescribe rules for every situation a business encounters. Principles-based codes are therefore more flexible and have a wider scope, focusing on the ‘spirit’ of the law or rule instead of specific rules. What this means is that everyone to whom the code applies needs to understand it, use their professional judgement to comply with it, and be accountable for their actions. A disadvantage could be that there is no specific guidance or rules to follow for specific situations
What are the seven core principles/values om which codes can be based on?
- integrity
- objectivity
- competence
- fairness
- confidentiality
- professionalism
- diligence.
What is ‘The Code’?
All individuals working in the banking industry are required to act in a fair and honest manner. This is to protect the interests of customers, colleagues and counterparties, and the wider interests of society as a whole. As a minimum, compliance with legislation, regulation, and industry/employer codes and standards is expected (Chartered Banker Institute, 2019).
Membership of the Chartered Banker Institute brings with it additional responsibilities. All members (including Fellows, Members, Associates and Students) are expected to display the highest standards of professionalism and a commitment to ethical conduct, giving at all times due care and consideration to others and putting the public interest first.
What are the Chartered Banker Code of Professional Conduct?
- Treating all customers, colleagues and counterparties with respect and acting with integrity
- Developing and maintaining my professional knowledge and acting with due skill, care and diligence; considering the risks and implications of my actions and advice, and holding myself accountable for them and their impact
- Being open and cooperative with the regulators; complying with all current regulatory and legal requirements
- Paying due regard to the interests of customers and treating them fairly
- Observing and demonstrating proper standards of market conduct at all times
- Acting in an honest and trustworthy manner, being alert to and managing potential conflicts of interest
- Treating information with appropriate confidentiality and sensitivity
What is integrity?
A simple definition of integrity is maintaining consistently high moral standards. It is accepted by most that integrity is one of the fundamental building blocks of ethical behaviour.
Professional integrity is a matter of acting and speaking consistently with the core values of the profession (as set out in the Code) – even in the face of pressure or temptation to do otherwise and even where no-one is likely to find out. Examples of behaviour that lacks integrity include lying, cheating (for example in exams) and taking credit for others’ work
Why is Banking considered a profession?
The Institute thinks that banking is a profession because those working in banking, regardless of their areas of specialism:
- require specialised skills and knowledge about banking – the business that they work in
- require to maintain and develop their specialised skills and knowledge throughout their professional life, reflecting on and learning from their experience to further enhance their practice, exercise professional and ethical judgement, and contribute to the development of the profession
- realise there is asymmetry of information between the banker and customer, whereby the banker generally has more specialised knowledge about their particular area of expertise than the customer, e.g., the banker whose role it is to explain different borrowing options to customers will typically know more about their lending products and services than the customer
- realise that their expertise is relied on by the public; as a result of this expertise, the professional has significant power to either harm or help individual customers and wider society
- have a role of service to the public and society; they must therefore act in the public interest with high levels of integrity, and provide a service based on meeting customers’ needs
- have a fiduciary relationship with customers; this means that the customer places special trust and confidence in the banking professional and relies on them to provide advice and assistance that is in their best interests – the professional therefore has a duty, as well as a moral obligation, to act in their customers’ best interests
- may belong to a professional body (for banking or other professions) which regulates their practice and requires adherence to ethical principles which the professional body oversees, usually in the form of a code of practice, conduct or ethics.
What is a professional Banker?
We believe that a ‘professional banker’ is someone who is:
- socially purposeful; one whose individual values are aligned with the purpose of their organisation and the banking sector
- customer-focused; acting in the best interests of customers
- an agile learner; taking charge of their own learning, learning from experience with speed and flexibility
- a creative thinker; asking questions, seeking solutions and generating ideas
- a technical specialist; has core banking knowledge as well as their own particular area of expertise
- a leader in business, finance and society.
What is ethics?
According to Nagel (2006), ethics is
“…the branch of philosophy that tries to understand a familiar type of evaluation: the moral evaluation of people’s character traits, their conduct, and their institutions. We speak of good and bad people, the morally right and wrong thing to do, just or unjust regimes, and how we should live”.
Ethics encourage us to think about:
- how to live a good life
- our rights and responsibilities
- moral decisions – what is right and wrong, or good and bad.
What is moral absolutism?
Moral absolutism is the view that some things are always right and some things are always wrong. They are fixed for all time, places and people.
Therefore, according to this view, there are some moral rules that are always true and apply to everyone, and acts that break these moral rules are wrong, regardless of the circumstances or consequences.
Those who support this view might say that it is fair because everyone is treated the same, in that the same rules would apply to everyone. Also, if a moral rule is ‘good’ and ‘right’, then there would be no need to have different rules for different people – these absolute rules would be universal and relevant to everyone.