The Committee met at 09.30 a.m.
MEMBERS PRESENT:
| Deputy Pearse Doherty, | Senator Sean D. Barrett, |
| Deputy Joe Higgins, | Senator Michael D’Arcy, |
| Deputy Michael McGrath, | Senator Marc MacSharry, |
| Deputy Eoghan Murphy, | Senator Susan O’Keeffe. |
| Deputy Kieran O’Donnell, | |
| Deputy John Paul Phelan, |
Central Bank-Financial Regulator – Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
The following witness was sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:
Ms Mary O’Dea, former acting Chief Executive, Central Bank-Financial Regulator.
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Ms O’Dea. If I can invite you to make your opening remarks to the committee, please. | 20 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Ms O’Dea, for your opening statement and welcome again. If I can commence this morning’s questions by inviting Deputy John Paul Phelan. Deputy, you have 15 minutes. | 31 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Mr. Neary resigned at that time. | 33 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| What was the nature of his resignation? | 34 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Well, I think, Mr. Neary told you that in his evidence here. I’ve no further information in relation to that. | 35 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Okay. How would you characterise his period as chief executive of the Financial Regulator? | 36 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
| No, I have absolutely no insight into that. I wasn’t involved in any of those discussions or, you know, in any discussions Mr. Neary may’ve had about that. | 44 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| When you were appointed as the chief executive, what were the key issues you felt needed addressing to enhance the quality of the Financial Regulator? | 45 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Did you advocate a more rapid clear-out of management, senior management and directors from the commercial banks in your time as acting chief executive? | 47 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Did you have a stated position with regard to whether there should be management clear-out at the highest level in some of the worst affected financial institutions? | 51 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Did the staff at the regulator believe that the Central Bank should have taken a more active role in banking supervision at that time? | 53 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| In 2009? Did my staff feel that we too should be taking more—– | 54 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I was. | 60 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Do you think your attendance, now, was ill-judged? | 61 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Well, as I say, at the time it didn’t strike—– | 64 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| It is not a senior citizens—– | 65 |
Chairman
| Allow time to answer as well now. | 66 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| I just want to say it’s not a senior citizens gathering or whatever … a citizens information—– | 67 |
Chairman
| The point has been made, Deputy Phelan. I need time to respond, and you’ve got questions to cover as well. Ms O’Dea. | 68 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| You think it was absolutely appropriate that you and all of the leading bankers should have been gathered at that particular event on that evening? You don’t see any conflict in that position? | 70 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| I want to be—– | 74 |
Chairman
| A question, now, Deputy. | 75 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Chairman
| Ask your question now, not a statement. | 77 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| I’m getting to the question, Chairman. | 78 |
Chairman
| You are going to run out of time. | 79 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Okay, thank you. | 82 |
Chairman
| Just to clarify one matter before I bring in Deputy Higgins, Ms O’Dea. You were on the IFSRA board authority from 2002, yes? | 83 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| As consumer director, I was an executive member of the board, that’s right. | 84 |
Chairman
| And were you on the CBFSAI before 2009? | 85 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| No. | 86 |
Chairman
| You came after—–? | 87 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| No, the consumer director post was only on the regulator board. | 88 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. Deputy Higgins. | 89 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Who is this now? | 92 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Can I refer to the evidence … core document page 54—– | 96 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Is it in the first booklet or the second one? | 97 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Vol. 1. | 98 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Vol. 1. | 99 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Ms O’Dea, at a time when it was clear that far more supervision and staff essentially was needed, was the pressure for the opposite to happen? | 102 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
| And if you just go to the next page then, Ms O’Dea … 56 of the same document. | 104 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes. | 105 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. | 112 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| So there was a lot of … I would call challenge with the banks during that period. | 113 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
| How did you respond to that situation? Did you go to the board? | 118 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I asked the entire board to come in to a meeting in the regulator to address it with them. | 119 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Did the situation change? Was there more co-operation then? | 120 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| The situation improved after that. | 121 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| That can be a supplementary. I’ll be bringing you back in again so, if we maybe stop at question one and we can take question two as supplementary. | 127 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Do you think it’s appropriate that profit seeking to that level should prejudice society and people’s interests so much that that should be allowed? | 128 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
| Yes. And that was your communication to consumers. You were also a member of the IFSRA at that time. What was your communication with them? | 134 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Well, my capacity on the board of IFSRA was as consumer director and my functions, as I said, were set out in law and that was how I carried out my functions at that stage. | 135 |
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
| The board would have been well aware of both the codes and the information that we produced for consumers at that stage. | 137 |
Chairman
| That’s not what I’m asking you, Ms O’Dea. | 138 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I’m sorry, Chair. Can you ask me again? | 139 |
Chairman
| I’m very, very clear about … you’re very clear here as to what you communicated to potential customers—– | 140 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes. | 141 |
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
| Yes. | 146 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Sure. | 149 |
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
| We produced a law, code, whatever you want to call it enforceable—– | 154 |
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
| Deputy McGrath. | 159 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Ms O’Dea, did principles-led regulation die on the night of the bank guarantee? | 162 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Was there a formal decision to move away from principles-led regulation and to move into more intrusive regulation which you have described? | 164 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And was it your decision and the decision of the board to change the nature and the practice of the regulation early in 2009? | 166 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Michael McGrath
| So, principles-led regulation was no more in early 2009. Is that your testimony? | 168 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And did you ever envisage that the NAMA initiative would ultimately expose a €42 billion hole in the balance sheet of the banks? | 174 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Well, I don’t think it was the NAMA initiative that exposed that hole—– | 175 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| It didn’t create it but—– | 176 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Exactly. | 177 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Mary O’Dea
| No. | 179 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| NAMA didn’t create it, but—– | 180 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| That’s right. | 181 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| … it exposed it, it allowed the full extent of it to be seen of the losses. | 182 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I certainly did not believe that the losses would be of that extent, no. | 183 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Thank you. | 184 |
Chairman
| Senator O’Keefe. | 185 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Thanks Chair. Ms O’Dea, can you comment on the initial State investment of €4 billion in June 2009 into Anglo, compared with the eventual total injection of €29 billion? | 186 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Comment in … in what way Senator? | 187 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Did that kind of drilling occur with your own efforts from … from the Financial Regulator’s office or did you need to bring in additional assistance or specialists? | 190 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I’d say both. I’d say the lack of staff but also the model, because there would’ve been no question of drilling down to those kind of conversations in a principles-led environment. | 193 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Well, I will be very careful—– | 195 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| You have to be. | 196 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Thank you. | 204 |
Chairman
| Senator D’Arcy. | 205 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes. I wasn’t actually part of the group but I introduced some of the background. Do you mean the document that’s in the pack? | 207 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Yes. | 208 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| You were the person in charge of the consumer protection side? | 210 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes. | 211 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| How many staff were beneath you? | 212 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| In the consumer area, by and large, there was about 90 people. | 213 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And how many were in the banking regulatory structure on the other side, where you were? | 214 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Most of the rest of the staff were in prudential, generally. And in banking, it would’ve been about, I think, around 30, 35, including the international banks. | 215 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| We’ve had evidence that three staff members were overseeing two banks. Was that … were those numbers sufficient? | 216 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Well, I think, for prudential legislation of an intrusive level, absolutely not. And I think—– | 217 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Even with principles-based? | 218 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I think, no. I think as we look at it now, even with principles-based regulation, that wasn’t enough. | 219 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| In previous evidence from your former workplace, we were told that people were being undermined within the structure. Did you ever see evidence of that? | 220 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| No—– | 221 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Did you hear that evidence previously given? | 222 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I heard the evidence given. I … I wasn’t involved in that. I didn’t see any of that at all. | 223 |
Chairman
| Just to give a reference to that, it was when Ms Mary Burke was in before the inquiry. | 224 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Ms Mary O’Dea
| We were actually in a separate building. The consumer building was in an entirely separate building and I never had meetings with anybody without having a member of my team with me. | 226 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Okay. You … in your opening statement, you said … sorry … was it fair that confidence was so low within the organisation that you were working? Was it fair and reasonable that it was so low? | 227 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Did your … did the office of the regulator fail the people of Ireland? | 229 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I think the model of regulation here and internationally did fail. I think both at—– | 230 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| No, sorry—– | 231 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| —–the systemic level—– | 232 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Not the model. Did the office fail? | 233 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I think … well, personally, I think that the failures were around the model that was chosen, and that was chosen by the office. | 234 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Well I—– | 236 |
Chairman
| Re the interpretation or the application? | 237 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And if you were to apportion the split of the both, which … is it 50:50, 60:40, 70:30, please? | 239 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Thank you. | 241 |
Chairman
| Deputy O’Donnell. Deputy, I’ll bring you back in but I’ll go to the next questioner, if you wish? | 242 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| No, no. | 243 |
Chairman
| I’ll move on. | 244 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| No, no, it’s fine, Chairman. | 245 |
Chairman
| Okay, well get to the point so, please, yes? | 246 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| What changes did you implement in 2009 to ensure appropriate action was taken against the banks for breaching regulations? | 247 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And how would they have been codified? | 253 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| They would have had to be set out as an enforceable code, and set out—– | 254 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| By whom? | 255 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| —–in that particular way. | 256 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| By whom? | 257 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| By the regulator. | 258 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So it was open to the regulator from 2005 on to basically bring in sanctions against banks that were breaching growth in property lending, if they wished? | 259 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I think, yes, I think that would have been open. It certain—– | 260 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But it wasn’t taken? | 261 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And was this—– | 263 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| —–Deputy, I have to just say that my knowledge, my better knowledge of this is in relation to my statutory role as consumer director. | 264 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Why did you decide then, on the consumer director side, to effectively codify these guidelines so that you could actually bring in … impose sanctions? | 265 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| In the limited time I have—– | 267 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes? | 268 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Well, everything you’re saying, I think, up to the option being open I would absolutely agree with you. I think the model was completely different in relation to a prudential supervisor. | 270 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| When you went in as regulator in ‘09, did you do it? Did you codify … did you codify on the prudential side, did you bring in sanctions on the prudential side? | 271 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But can I just make a comment? | 275 |
Chairman
| You can be allowed comment with a question; I can, but a comment, no. | 276 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Absolutely. | 278 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So would you just comment on that? | 279 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes, no, I think you’re absolutely right, 100% right in relation to that, because I think that the issue was around negative equity, and that is the issue we pointed out to consumers. | 280 |
Chairman
| Sorry, I just want to get my head around this just once more, and … we have to write a report at the end of this process—– | 281 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Of course, yes. | 282 |
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
| Deputy Murphy. | 285 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Ms Mary O’Dea
| At that stage I was on the regulatory side, so I was the acting chief executive of the regulator at that time. | 287 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| So you were involved in the IMF when they came to do that country report? | 288 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes. | 289 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| And that involved then being involved in terms of their work in relation to NAMA that they were doing at the time? | 290 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes. And they comment on NAMA in their report, yes. | 291 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| You couldn’t produce them to the IMF but you were working on them? | 296 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Well, we obviously shared with the IMF whatever we had. | 297 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Because they just noted that you did not formally produce any estimate for aggregate bank losses. | 298 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Was it a mistake to focus on the restructuring of property loans in banks rather than to spend more time focusing on the aggregate losses that they were facing? | 300 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| But was the thinking at the time that NAMA might have a broader scope than just property-related loans going onto its books? | 306 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I don’t recall particularly. I don’t recall that it was ruled out but I do recall that the priority at that time was in relation to the larger property loans. | 307 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, and then do you recall why the IMF staff queried why NAMA was acquiring good loans as well as bad ones? | 308 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Is this not the IMF anticipating it in their country report? | 312 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| No, but what the IMF are saying is that … just read the sentence to me again there. | 313 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| “Staff noted that nationalization could become necessary but should be seen as complementary to NAMA.” | 314 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes, and the staff are simply noting that. | 315 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, but that wasn’t—– | 316 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| So, I don’t think you’re saying that there was any resistance by anybody to that. | 317 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, thank you. | 320 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much. Senator MacSharry. | 321 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Thanks very much. Thanks, Ms O’Dea, for being here. Is there collective responsibility on the board of the regulator? | 322 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| In what sense? I don’t know what your … what your question is. | 323 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So were your duties exclusive to those specific ones or did you not have the normal fiduciary duties as all the other directors would to the broader mission of the regulator? | 326 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes, I would have in a general sense, yes. | 327 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So there was collective responsibility. | 328 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes, but … but to be honest, I was only on the board—– | 329 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| No, I know you may have only—– | 330 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| —–because of my statutory function. | 331 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| I have—– | 332 |
Chairman
| Give her time to respond. Ms O’Dea. | 333 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Sorry, I was only on the board because of my statutory function, I wasn’t a non-executive. So that’s where I clearly saw my role as—– | 334 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| You were an executive? | 335 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| An executive board member because I was the consumer director. | 336 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| But all directors would have a fiduciary duty to the mission of the organisation, would that be correct? | 337 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes, yes. | 338 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So, to my understanding, and correct me if I’m wrong, that would mean collective responsibility? | 339 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes. | 340 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Chairman
| Senator—– | 342 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Sorry, what’s wrong, what’s wrong? I mean, we’re … we’re talking about previous evidence here now. | 343 |
Chairman
| If you can ask the witness, was there ever … or care to confirm it and then ask her why? | 344 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Marc MacSharry
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Marc MacSharry
Ms Mary O’Dea
| No, because of the model that I’ve just described to you—– | 350 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| The model did allow for enforcement action but we just didn’t take—– | 351 |
Chairman
| Let the witness respond as well, now. | 352 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Chairman
| You made it very, very clear, Senator, I need to get a response. | 354 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| —–as a matter of form, they were never taken and I’m asking why? | 355 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So the actions of the regulator, in terms of its board, because of the model, was or was it not one where we considered the outcome for the bank more than the State? Is that what you’re saying? | 357 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Absolutely not. I don’t think anybody—– | 358 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay—– | 359 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| —–sitting on the board said: “We consider the outcome—– | 360 |
Chairman
| Senator, wrap up there because I’ve a question to ask as well. | 361 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| —–“We consider the outcome for the bank or not the State”—– | 362 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| You did say you’d give me a bit of extra time. | 363 |
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. Next up is Senator Barrett. Senator Barrett, you have six minutes. | 366 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Mary O’Dea
| During 2009 we had that IMF mission and that’s … to be honest with you, most of it was actually domestic interaction. I had very little interaction with the other authorities. | 368 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| And with the European authorities? | 369 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Very little interaction with them. | 370 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Mary O’Dea
| This is the Governor now you’re talking about? | 374 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| The duties of the Governor and the board. | 375 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes … well, at that stage, I think that would have been within the Central Bank’s mandate, I wasn’t within the Central Bank at that time, Senator. | 376 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| The World Economic Forum in 2009 rated the soundness of Irish banks at 121 out of 122 countries that reported. Were there no alarm bells going on through this period? | 377 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| The dangers of foreign denominated debt, did that enter into the discussions? | 385 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Again, you know, the same issue … I wasn’t involved in those discussions. | 386 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Bank credit growing on average at 30% per annum in some of the years and some banks way in excess of that. Were those kinds of issues discussed? | 387 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Did you make any contribution to bringing our problems to Europe, you know, as the country that had the worst bank crisis as a percentage of GDP? | 389 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Do you … in what period are you talking about? | 390 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Mary O’Dea
| I’m afraid I can’t help you on that because I wouldn’t have been involved in any of those discussions with Europe in my capacity. | 392 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Were there contrarians in the Central Bank? | 393 |
Chairman
| Time to wrap up there now, Senator. | 394 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Thank you. This is the last one, Chairman. Thank you very much. | 395 |
Chairman
| Okay, this is the last question with regard to contrarians. | 396 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Thank you very much. And thanks, Chairman. | 398 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. You mentioned, and correct me if I’m wrong, to Deputy McGrath that during your period, principles regulation was not active, that you weren’t practising. Is that correct? | 401 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Yes. | 402 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| So what, what type of regulation were you practising? | 403 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| No—– | 409 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| —–a whole new type. We were viewing regulation differently. | 410 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Well, there was a huge change in the practice. So I think that’s what you are asking me, is it? | 412 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Everything that was done—– | 413 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Was it the practice of regulation—– | 414 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| —–under your term, could it have been done without any change to the principles in the previous term of the Financial Regulator? | 415 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Well, the big … the significant change in the law that we had was the guarantee scheme. | 416 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 417 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Chairman
| I’ll have to push you for time. | 420 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Can I just check with you, Chairman, what period you are referring to? | 424 |
Chairman
| It would have been 2002 to 2009, right through the whole period. | 425 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
| Is that consumer or prudential? | 427 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
| And the 2005 to 2009 period? | 429 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| And in the 2005 to 2009 period on the prudential side only are you talking about? In relation to the prudential side, I don’t know of specific enforcement actions that were taken there. | 430 |
Chairman
| And on the consumer regulatory side? | 431 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
| What page is it on, Chairman? | 434 |
Chairman
| It’s from your own opening statement, pages 3 and 4. You can refer to it. | 435 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
| We’ll move to wrap up. Deputy Phelan. | 437 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Are you talking about my time after the acting chief executive, when I moved? | 441 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Yes, were you involved in—– | 442 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| And I’m okay to answer that, Chairman? | 443 |
Chairman
| You can. | 444 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Chairman
| Be careful now, a new line of questioning. | 447 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Chairman
| That could be leading. | 449 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Strange or not—– | 450 |
Chairman
| Incongruous. | 451 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| What were your views when that was happening? | 452 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| My role in the IMF, did you say April 2013? | 453 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Yes. | 454 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Chairman
| The question has been made. Ms O’Dea. | 457 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
| Deputy Higgins. | 459 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Mary O’Dea
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Ms O’Dea, with respect—– | 464 |
Chairman
| Put the question, Deputy, and then—– | 465 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–young people needed homes, starting families etc. They were put into a position of blackmail by common consent, that’s not a leading question—– | 466 |
Chairman
| Sorry, that’s a leading question now, Deputy, please, so—– | 467 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| It isn’t a leading question. If you wanted a home, the people who had the homes sold them to you at this … at these incredible conditions and prices, etc. | 468 |
Chairman
| That’s a … Ms O’Dea. | 469 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Leave the soft landing out of it, just what was happening and what was going to happen to young people, did that not set alarm bells ringing? | 470 |
Chairman
| Deputy, we are running way over time, I have to push you out. Ms O’Dea, the response please. | 471 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
| Who … who was doing it? The banking supervision team or the consumer protection staff? Who were doing the inspections—— | 475 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
| The consumer protection staff. | 476 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 477 |
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
| Exactly. | 480 |
Chairman
Ms Mary O’Dea
Chairman
Sitting suspended at 11.42 a.m. and resumed at 12.04 p.m.