Grand Theft Europe scandal – one more reason to #ChangeFinance
10 May 2019
Reading level: Beginner
Reading Time: 2 min.
The latest on a long list of affairs revealed by civil society, the Grand Theft Europe scandal has resulted in the loss of billions of euros of public money. An ever-increasing number of financial scandals is not inevitable though.
A constant shower of damning reports on opacity and scandals in the financial sector is the result of a worrying lack of democratic control. The controversial appointment of the chief lobbyist of a systemic bank as head of the European banking regulator was a strong reminder of this: when national egos bypass democratic processes to push for their own interests, lobby powers take full advantage of these loopholes, at society’s expense.
But all this is not inevitable. A few weeks before crucial European elections, we are proposing two courses of action for committed citizens:
I Vote to make finance serve society
Finance Watch has analysed the financial reform proposals of all political groups for the #European Elections 2019, compared them to our vision for finance that serves society and scored their ambition to change finance:
More than 1,700 lobbyists work for the financial sector in Brussels. Are your EU parliamentary candidates ready to #ChangeFinance? Ask them to commit themselves to work for better oversight of lobbying, and to improve representativeness in decision-making circles by signing a pledge, already signed by 230 candidates: