Saturday 29 August 2009

A grand discourse on the future of the City of London


The fall-out from the financial crash continues. Markets and economies may be stabilising but we are now in the midst of a grand discourse and clash of ideas on the role of financial markets. Lord Turner, head of the FSA, the City regulator, has been quoted in a magazine article as saying that some City trading activity is "socially useless" and "efficient market theory" has been found wanting and consideration should be given to a transaction tax called Tobin's tax, after the US economist who first suggested it, to reduce the power of financial markets.

The reaction from the City and also government has been strongly critical but interestingly the reaction from the financial press has been more nuanced and supportive of the debate. This supports my sense that the City has ridden roughshod over the financial media (and society?) for too long and is paying the price. The City has also ignored the requirement in a modern democracy that a major sector needs to participate in the debate of ideas with society, along the lines of Habermas' communicative action with a genuine interest in hearing different perspectives. The City has put forward a very narrow ideology based on jobs and importance to UK plc and the financial crash has led to this being questioned. Somehow one cannot imagine that the industry body, the British Bankers Association, has ever funded research on supporting the rationale of financial markets, but perhaps this now needs to be part of its communications strategy going forward, if it wants to protect the interest of its members.

The French philospher, Michel Foucault, would surely have been interested in this debate. Not only is the accepted "truth" of the primacy of financial markets now being contended but it is the way that the new discourses are being developed. Foucault was interested not only in the "regime of truth" but the processes developing it. The current debate has not come from the left and traditional critics of the City; but this time from the heart of the City establishment - and in Foucauldian terms, this is what gives it such power. In fact the original Prospect article which takes the form of a round table discussion/interview with Lord Turner by leading City analysts and journalists including a recently retired Deputy Governor of the Bank of England, John Grieve. In PR terms it will be interesting to see what discourse strategies are developed by the City establishment in the coming weeks and months to defend its position; certainly it is a particularly interesting challenge for the City's financial PR community to consider.

No doubt the City will "win" the argument in the short and medium term. However, as some media have suggested the most difficult long term blow for the City comes with the comment that it is "socially useless" In a society where corporate social responsibility is part of the framework and language of modern organisations and the way that they sell themselves to future employees - that is indeed a damaging blow.

Saturday 15 August 2009

US healthcare debate - PR's dirty secret?

Is the US healthcare debate which seems to have quickly moved to "sound and fury" and limited illumination of the various points - or at least how it is reported over here in the UK - also an example of PR distorting the "public space".

Bloomberg highlights that it is a lobbying feeding frenzy with most of the lobbying coming from the major interest groups such as the health insurers. Open Secrets a NGO whose mission is to bring into the public forum, the link between private finance and Washington politics, has a table showing that healthcare lobbying accounts for some of the largest investment in lobbying by any industry sector groups over the last 10 years. Another list provided by Open Secrets , shows leading Washington lobbyists. I can only see one firm which jumps out with strong links to major international agencies, Ogilvy Government Relations, which is part of WPP.

Behind the lobbying will be some very large PR campaigns, both media relations and public engagement. A former PR director of communications in the US insurance sector has given insight into this area and criticised some of the techniques used in an interview on another NGO site, Center for Media and Democracy, whose domain name suggests the agenda, PRWatch.org.

I am not across the debate and the various points of view. However I was very struck by hearing recently from my cousin who lives in the USA about her fears and concerns about health care and the cost as she and her family get older particularly as unemployment grows. Certainly looking at the sheer volume of money from the health industry in the US going into the political process which has probably been matched by PR and advertising campaigns over this period and it does suggest that the communication process has been "colonised" as Habermas suggested.

Is there a debate in the US PR industry about its role in the healthcare debate as it raises important issues for all of us involved in the industry?

Thursday 6 August 2009

Goldman Sachs reputation under the spotlight - time to read about Habermas and social legitimacy


The reputation of Goldman Sachs, the legendary investment bank, which survived the financial crisis in better shape than almost all financial institutions, has now come in for a new series of attacks in the media, some from unexpected media sources, such as Rolling Stone magazine as well as the New York magazine. These articles have in turn generated a wider news agenda.


Recent comments have been more nuanced than the general attack on all banks earlier in the year; as this time it has primarily focused on Goldman Sach's access to power particularly under President Bush, and how the bailout of the banks and other key financial institutions such as the insurance company AIG was especially beneficial for the organisation. Taibbi, the author of the highly critical article in Rolling Stone would say even saved Goldman Sachs.

The Financial Times this week, entered the fray about Goldman Sachs, as it had commissioned WPP company Brand Asset Consulting, to do a major survey on the attitude of US citizens to financial organisations. This large 17000 people survey, which one assumes had taken place prior to these recent critical articles, highlighted that the reputation of Goldman Sachs had suffered over the last two years, more for example, than Morgan Stanley which has been noticeably less successful. The FT quoted survey organiser, Anne Rivers, that "Goldman Sachs still has that Gordon Gekko look to it among the general public,” referring to the villain of the 1987 film Wall Street.

It raises an interesting point about corporate reputation which the New York magazine suggests, that Goldman Sachs may be suffering as it is seen as too successful and powerful. Can too much success be damaging for the corporate reputation of a major organisation - Microsoft might suggest this is feasible. But is this the reason in the case of Goldman Sachs?

I think the problem is related to the fact that financial organisations are still coming to grips with the new order. They are no longer "Masters of the Universe" - able to set the political and financial agenda - which for the last 20 years they have been able to do so, with governments in awe of them. The financial community needs to think about the concept of a "licence to operate". Social legitimacy draws on, amongst others, Habermas and communicative action and that organisations need to earn the right to operate. The financial sector has been a classic example of a sector which has "colonised" and so distorted the communicative process with wider society about its role i.e set the agenda, not listened carefully to society and other interest groups.

The financial crash and rescue of the financial community by international governments has changed all this. I would suggest that society is now requiring that large financial organisations like Goldman Sachs need to be more than just financial technocrats and need to articulate more strongly how they are contributing to society. This is not something which changes over night but, I would suggest, is an important element of corporate reputation and the latest comments from the Head of Communications at Goldman Sachs suggests that this lesson is still being learned, as the Reuters blogger suggests.