SHARE
COPY LINK

FINANCE

Top banker urges pay cuts for ‘inflated egos’

One of Germany’s top bankers has blasted senior colleagues around the world with a call to end exorbitant bonuses in the banking industry, business newspaper Handelsblatt reported Sunday.

Top banker urges pay cuts for 'inflated egos'
Klaus-Peter Müller. Photo: DPA

Klaus-Peter Müller, chairman of the supervisory board of Commerzbank – Germany’s second-largest bank – and president of the Association of German Banks, reserved particular disdain for the big banks in the US and Britain, and urged Europe not to go down the same path.

“I really have no sympathy when they say there are big problems with curbing the excessive bonuses of investment bankers,” said Müller, who also heads the German government’s corporate governance commission.

“Worldwide, there are about 10 big investment banks. Why can’t they agree to pay no more excessive salaries?”

He urged his colleagues to think very hard about how much money their skills were really worth.

“Inflated egos are an attitude that a society sooner or later destroys.”

Overpaid workers in the banking sector were “primarily an Anglo-Saxon problem” he said.

He called on Europeans to steer clear of this undesirable trend, saying he was “hoping for a healthy new European self-confidence” on the issue.

Müller’s strong criticism comes at a time when bonuses totalling billions are once again the order of the day, despite the backlash in the wake of the global financial crisis. The three biggest US investment banks, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley und J.P. Morgan, are alone planning for bonuses totalling about €20 billion in 2009.

In Germany, Deutsche Bank is considered the major culprit, setting aside €1.3 billion for its 14,000 investment bankers in the third quarter of this year – more than double what it paid in the same period last year.

Commerzbank recently announced a plan to curb its own bonuses. Executive pay is limited to €500,000 as part of restrictions placed on the bank by the bank rescue fund SoFFin in exchange for an €18 billion bailout.

Political leaders are likely to pay attention to Müller’s call.

Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble has told business magazine Wirtschaftswoche that banks “ought to be strengthening their capital resources” rather than paying out huge bonuses.

At a G20 meeting in April, leaders of the most powerful nations discussed the possibility of restricting compensation that rewards short term risk-taking.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

BANKING

Card over cash? Why Germany is seeing a new payment preference

Cash has long been king in Germany, with many smaller retailers refusing to join the rest of the world in adopting contactless payment systems. But card-based payments are on the rise, as recent stats about Girocard use reveal.

Card over cash? Why Germany is seeing a new payment preference

Germany has long been a very cash-based country, occasionally to the dismay of frustrated tourists at the Döner shop.

A few German phrases express the people’s love of physical money. There’s ‘only cash is true’ – Nur Bares ist Wahres. Or Bargeld lacht, literally meaning cash laughs, but used to imply that cash is what’s wanted, similar to ‘cash is king’ in English.

But the classic German preference for cash appears to be evolving, as the use of girocards is growing, even for small transactions.

How are girocards being used?

Girocard, an ATM and debit card service offered by German Banks, was designed to allow customers to use virtually all German ATMs and, increasingly, to make purchases at businesses.

READ ALSO: Ask an expert – Why is cash still so popular in Germany, and is it changing?

Last year, consumers in Germany used their Girocard more often than ever before for cashless payments. A total of €7.48 billion payment transactions with the plastic card were counted – 11.5 percent more than in the previous record year 2022, according to figures published by the Frankfurt-based institution Euro Card Systems.

Whether at the bakery, petrol station or supermarket, customers are increasingly pulling out their cards at the checkout, even for smaller amounts. As a result, the average amount paid with the Girocard fell from €42.34 to €40.69 within a year. 

The rise of card payments in Germany

Contactless payment, which is possible with girocards and credit cards that have an NFC chip, got a boost during the Covid pandemic, as retailers promoted it for hygiene reasons. 

But the use of card payments has continued to grow in Germany since then, boosted partly by the increasing use of girocards.

Promoting the use of girocards, some German banks have expanded their cards’ functions: Sparkassen, Volksbanken, or Raiffeisenbanken offer girocards for the digital wallet, for example.

Banks want to continue upgrading the payment card with further applications. For example, a project is being tested which would add an age verification function to girocards that would be useful when a customer is buying cigarettes.

On the retail side, it’s clear why the Girocard is preferred to other debit options.

“We see that debit cards from international providers cost up to four times more,” Ulrich Binnebößel, Head of the Payment Systems & Logistics Department at the German Retail Association (HDE) told DPA.

What’s the difference between the Girocard and other debit?

The Girocard is a strictly German phenomenon. It can be seen as the latest iteration of the EC card, which was created to consolidate payment systems following the unification of former East and West Germany.

In 1991 different debit card systems, including Eurocheque guarantee cards from former West Germany and Geldkarte ATMs from former East Germany, were unified into Eurocheque cards.

Then in 2001, the Eurocheque system was disbanded, but German banks continued to use the EC logo for “electronic cash’” cards, or EC cards. In 2007, the German Banking Industry Committee introduced Girocard as a common name for electronic cash and the German ATM network.

Girocards are only issued and accepted in Germany, so if you want to get one of your own, you’ll have to join a German bank, and shell out those notorious German banking fees.

READ ALSO: Why it’s almost impossible to find a free bank account in Germany

Alternatively, you can get by with internationally accepted debit cards provided by a bank in your home country, or otherwise by joining an app-based European banking service like N26. 

But be warned, without the Girocard in hand, at some smaller retailers you may be told, “Leider nur Bargeld oder EC-Karte.

With reporting by DPA

SHOW COMMENTS