elacsaplau
Registered User
- Messages
- 889
it still amazes me that after 10 years, nearly 40,000 cases that their are still significant groups still fighting cases where the weight of evidence is so much in favour of the customer and the central bank remains as passive as ever![/QUOTE]
Before this is finished the State could finish up picking up a large tab,Let's look at the Central Bank in a balanced way....
Did all banks comply with the CPC code in all cases where customers still have complaints?
If not, what has the Regulator of the CPC done about it?
My view of the CB's performance in the two cases in which I am very very familiar is FAIL, as in, 2 maybe 3 out of 10!
It is not the role of the CB to make legal determinations - it is its role to regulate.
i did very little to address the issue for 8 years i don’t think i would be getting an 8 out of 10 rating in any performance review
Honestly BB this is a crazy view. The CB failed massively. The banks committed powerful financial chicanery on many people. We had no hope. I took a case against UB to the ombudsman never knowing I had zero chance of succeeding after months of ‘letters’ to not answer me from UB ( I have the files if UB threatens you in relation to my post).Let's look at the Central Bank in a balanced way....
First, they were very slow to do anything about the tracker issue. Deduct marks for that.
Second, they persuaded the lenders to go well beyond their legal obligations. About 30,000 borrowers have got significant redress. My guess is that about 1,000 of these would have succeeded in the Ombudsman's Office if they had taken a complaint. A big plus for the Central Bank.
AIB was absolutely clear that these 6,000 borrowers have suffered no loss and so they were refusing point blank to even write to them telling them that there had been an issue.
The Central Bank persuaded AIB to write to all of them and give them the right of appeal - a big plus for the Central Bank.
AIB refused to go any further. It is not the role of the Central Bank to make a legal determination. That is up to the courts. So even if the Central Bank believes that the borrowers have a strong case, they can't force AIB to concede it.
Governor Lane at the Oireachtas Committee appeared to lend support to AIB's case by saying that the tracker rates would have been much higher. I will deduct marks for that.
Derville Rowland later rowed back from that.
So overall? Late to the party, but a good performance since they arrived. Maybe 8/10.
Brendan
I took a case against UB to the ombudsman never knowing I had zero chance of succeeding after months of ‘letters’ to not answer me from UB
Honestly BB this is a crazy view. The CB failed massively. The banks committed powerful financial chicanery on many people......You always omit to say that the little guy against the big bank should have strong suppport from the CB.
About 30,000 people have got significant redress following the restoration of their trackers. ( 40,000 in total, but about 10,000 were very small.)
Before the redress scheme set up by the Central Bank, how many do you think got their tracker back due to complaining directly to the lenders or by going to the Ombudsman or by going to the courts?
The Central Bank is a privately owned bank, does not regulate interest rates or money flow.
Nonsense. It's a public entity.
Some central banks (Greece and Belgium I think) are somewhat privately owned, but not in Ireland.
The central bank may reason that the wider public interest can be served by protecting banks...particularly state owned banks. That might mean a few thousand customers getting shafted.Excuse my wording........privately run bank
Our Mission.
The Central Bank of Ireland serves the public interest by safeguarding monetary and financial stability and by working to ensure that the financial system operates in the best interests of consumers and the wider economy.
Considering the last 20 years, bit of a strange one?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?