My Lords, we have seen a display of remarkable complacency from the Minister, even in his final remark suggesting that the Bank and the Treasury can informally arrange regular contact. I remind him that the head of the FSA and the head of the Bank did not meet for a decade within the tripartite structure. Now we are going to have a structure of not just three regulators but five or six regulators and he is not even willing to contemplate ensuring a statutory requirement for them to provide a suitable exchange of information.
I am sure that the noble Lord’s officials assured him that the term “material risk” was satisfactory. It would not be surprising as they drafted the legislation. It would be nice to hear that some independent opinion had been taken. He said that our amendments would lead to the Bank notifying “trivial and implausible risks”. Yes, trivial and implausible risks, such as credit default swaps, might fail to transfer risk. Those were trivial and implausible. There was the trivial and implausible risk that an economy of just 2% of the eurozone—the Greek economy—would lead to stagnation in the whole zone. There is another trivial and implausible risk.
The extreme complacency being displayed by the Government over these arrangements really beggars belief. With respect to the amendment which would insert the word “comprehensive” before “sharing of information”, “Oh, it’s unnecessary. We know that they will exchange all the necessary information”—just like they did not do in the past. Why can we not create a proper statutory requirement when there has clearly been such a deficiency in these procedures in the past? That, after all, is what this Bill should be for.
Having said that, and I hope having established some matters for discussion at Third Reading, I beg leave to withdraw the amendment.