Former Royal Bank of Scotland chief executive Sir Fred
Goodwin, who has had his knighthood stripped from him. (AP
Photo /Danny Lawson, File)
Britain took the rare step of stripping former Royal Bank
of Scotland chief Fred Goodwin of his knighthood, following
intense criticism of his role in RBS' near-collapse during the
2008 credit crisis, and public anger towards wealthy bankers.
"The failure of RBS played an important role in the financial
crisis of 2008-9 which, together with other macroeconomic
factors, triggered the worst recession in the UK since the
Second World War and imposed significant direct costs on
British taxpayers and businesses," the government said in a
statement.
"Fred Goodwin was the dominant decision maker at RBS at the
time," it added, explaining a decision taken by a committee
of civil servants.
Goodwin had been awarded the knighthood in 2004 for services
to banking, but has since come under heavy criticism from the
public after taxpayer funds were used to bail out the
stricken bank.
The government said it would soon be announced that Goodwin's
knighthood had been "cancelled and annulled".
The Scottish banker spearheaded RBS' disastrous acquisition
of Dutch bank ABN AMRO, which nearly caused the collapse of
RBS during the 2008 crisis.
RBS ended up having to be propped up with 45 billion pounds
of taxpayers' money, with the government finishing up with an
83 percent stake in the bank.
It is very rare for Britain to remove people of their
knighthoods, and Goodwin joins the ranks of figures such as
former Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, who forfeited an
honorary knighthood.
The woes of RBS have come to symbolise for many in Britain
more serious problems with the country's banking industry.
Many are still angry at the fact that bankers are continuing
to get paid millions while elsewhere thousands lose their
jobs as the economy weakens.
On Sunday, the current chief executive of RBS - Stephen
Hester - was forced to decline a million pound share bonus
after the award had been attacked by all major British
political parties.
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