Daniel Boffey in Brussels 

Mario Draghi told to drop membership of secretive bankers’ club

EU ruling follows claims G30 group has too much influence with ECB president as member
  
  

Mario Draghi
Mario Draghi was informed of the decision on Wednesday by the European ombudsman. Photograph: Michael Probst/AP

The president of the European Central Bank has been told by the EU’s watchdog he should drop his membership of a secretive club of corporate bankers, after claims the group had been given an inside seat from which it could influence key policies.

Following a year-long investigation, Mario Draghi was informed on Wednesday by the European ombudsman, Emily O’Reilly, that his close relationship with the Washington-based G30 group threatened the reputation of the bank, despite his assurances to the contrary.

Members of the exclusive club, of which only two of the current 33 are women, are chosen by an anonymous board of trustees, it emerged during the ombudsman’s investigation.

Only the identity of the chair of the trustees, Jacob A Frenkel, the chairman of JPMorgan Chase International, has been made public.

O’Reilly noted the group’s secrecy and lack of transparency over the content of its meetings. She additionally called for a ban on all future presidents of the ECB taking up membership of the club, previously named the Consultative Group on International Economic and Monetary Affairs.

The ruling followed a complaint by the Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO), a Brussels-based NGO, which claimed Draghi’s close relationship to G30 was in contravention of the ECB’s ethical code.

During his presidency of the ECB, Draghi, an Italian economist who previously worked at Goldman Sachs, has attended four G30 meetings, in 2012, 2013 and twice in 2015.

O’Reilly said there was a danger that the bank’s independence could be perceived to have been compromised by Draghi’s involvement with the group, whose members include a number of central bank governors, private sector bankers and academics. The governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, is a member. But O’Reilly said there was no evidence of sensitive information being shared.

The ombudsman said: “The ECB takes decisions that directly affect the lives of millions of citizens. In the aftermath of the financial crisis, and in consideration of the additional powers given to the ECB in recent years to supervise member state banks in the public interest, it is important to demonstrate to that public that there is a clear separation between the ECB as supervisor and the finance industry which is affected by its decisions.”

O’Reilly said any meetings between the ECB and the G30 should in future be made public and summaries should be provided of the discussions.

A complaint in 2012 had been dismissed by the ombudsman, but O’Reilly said times had moved on and the ECB had failed to show how the public benefited from Draghi’s membership. The relationship between the bank and the G30 should “be in alignment with certain of the bank’s own governance rules and codes”, she said.

A spokesman for the ECB said it had taken note of the ruling and would respond in due course.

 

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