Financial Services and Markets Bill: Bishop of Manchester speaks in committee

The Bishop of Manchester spoke at the first committee debate for the Financial Services and Markets Bill on 22nd June 2022, stressing the importance of face-to-face banking and financial services:

The Lord Bishop of Manchester: My Lords, it is a great honour to follow the noble Baroness., Lady Tyler. As I listened to her speech, I was crossing off most of the things that I was going to say, because she said them much more eloquently than I could have, and I am thankful for that. We need to be able to provide everybody with the best possible services, locally available. As the noble Baroness said, when people are at their most vulnerable, at the most crucial moments of their lives and taking the big decisions, being face to face makes all the difference.

I gather that an article in the Spectator says that Bishops do not mention the word Jesus enough when we are speaking in your Lordships’ House—well, I have just covered that one, for Hansard’s benefit. In my theology, when God had something really important to do, He did not send an email or text message or put writing in the sky. He sent a person, in Jesus Christ, to meet other human beings face to face. We lose face-to-face services at our peril.

Occasionally, yes, I am involved with the closing of a church. But very few churches, certainly Anglican ones, have been closed in England over the past 40 or 50 years, because we recognise the importance of providing face-to-face encounters for people to meet other people. While I appreciate that we do not want to overregulate, I feel that, as I said at Second Reading, making face-to-face banking services available to people when that is what they need, because they have a big decision and are feeling vulnerable, gains priority over the convenience of the banks. They might pass some small costs on to the rest of us, and it might affect the bonuses that some bankers get and the shareholders’ dividends at the end of the day, but that is a price to pay for seeing that everybody is included in the banking world.

Hansard