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Date: 2024-04-23 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00002666
BANKING
THE UK RATE RIGGING SCANDAL

Counting the Cost ... How can public trust in Britain's banks be restored?

http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/countingthecost/2012/07/20127712473140351.html
COMMENTARY
The wheels of justice turn very slowly. The gaming of LIBOR went on for several years from 2003 to 2009. Why does this not come as a surprise? Because it is the norm for white collar crime, and especially crime that involves prominent companies in the establishment.
Peter Burgess
Counting the Cost ... The impact of the rate-rigging scandal

How can public trust in Britain's banks be restored?


Aljazeera

Last Modified: 07 Jul 2012 13:47

Before this week you may never have heard of Libor. But thanks to the actions of a 322-year-old British banking institution it has been all over the headlines, and for all the wrong reasons.

This week on Counting the Cost we are focusing on Barclays, which in the space of a few days lost its CEO, its chairman - and perhaps its reputation too - after British and US regulators fined it $453m for manipulating the Libor rate.

Libor stands for stands for London Inter Bank Offered Rate and it is a measure of how much banks have to pay to borrow from their rivals and it is worked out every day from estimates submitted by the major banks of their own interbank lending costs.

The price of financial transactions worth trillions of dollars that are made every day around the world are set according to Libor. Mortgage rates are also linked to Libor. In fact, Britain's housing minister believes the scandal may have even contributed to families losing their homes after the credit crunch.

We speak to Tony Greenham, the head of finance at the New Economics Foundation, who tells us what the interest rates scandal means for the banks and the people on the street.

Also on Counting the Cost: Laura Kyle is reporting on Burkina Faso’s Gold rush. The African nation is in the grip of a regional drought and while a poor harvest and rising food prices are leaving millions hungry, heavy foreign investment has prompted a resurgence in the country's gold mining industry. And worse still, thousands of those affected by the drought - including children - are now working in illegal pits that have sprung up on the edge of official mines.

We are also looking at Mexico's elections, and leaving aside the dispute over the vote, there is a new face to watch at the top. Enrique Pena Nieto, Mexico's new leader, tells us how he plans to shake up the Mexican economy.

Watch each week at the following times GMT: Friday: 2230; Saturday: 0930; Sunday: 0330; Monday: 1630. Click here for more Counting the Cost.

Follow Kamahl Santamaria @KamahlAJE and business editor Abid Ali @abidoliverali

Source: Al Jazeera
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MORE: Open file #21502 ... BANKING ... THE UK LIBOR SCANDAL ... 2003 TO 2009 ... HBS CASE ... Barclays and the LIBOR Scandal

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