Fred the Shred urged to give up £650k pension
Thursday 26th February 2009, 10:18AM GMT.
The government is pressurising former Royal Bank of Scotland chief of executive Sir Fred Goodwin to forego his £650,000 pension after record corporate losses from the bank.
Sir Fred, who earned his ‘the Shred’ nom de guerre over a reputation for cost-cutting, is already drawing on the pension despite being only 50, but Alistair Darling is putting pressure on him to cut back his retirement package.
Today RBS reported a £24.1 billion loss – the greatest in UK corporate history.
The total pension pot is estimated at £16 million.
The chancellor has stated the pension could not be justified.
“We’ve got the lawyers looking at this,” Mr Darling told the Today programme.
“But I do think that on a voluntary basis, actually, Sir Fred could resolve this problem and he could do it quite quickly.”
For Sir Fred to be stripped of his pension, it would have to be proved he was negligent, which is thought to be unlikely.
A spokesperson for RBS explained the bank’s lawyers were making further investigations into the issue.
She added the bank was also in discussions with the UK Financial Investments (UKFI) – the government body that is managing the taxpayer’s bank holdings – about Sir Fred’s pension.
“I think that is a scandal,” said Treasury select committee chairman John McFall told the BBC.
“He is leaving with not just good pension, but a pension that is eye watering.”
Sir Fred, speaking to the Treasury select committee this month, defended his pension not being linked to the performance of RBS.
“My pension is the same as everyone else in the bank who is in a defined benefit pension scheme,” he told MPs.
“It is determined in the same way as anyone else, and anywhere else, in a defined benefit pension scheme. I am not seeking to not be linked to the share price performance of the bank; that was achieved through the shareholding in which I have lost a lot of money.”
He added he personally had lost £5 million from the fall in the RBS share price.
Shropshire Star on Twitter
Keep updated with the latest breaking news and content on our Twitter feed.
Lifestyle
Interactive Dining Out map
Hundreds of reviews by the Shropshire Star and Express & Star's teams to help you decide where to eat.
Entertainment
All the film reviews
Before you plan a trip to the pictures, get our critics' verdicts on all the latest movie releases.
OUR NEW APP
Get the new Shropshire Star app
Download the Shropshire Star’s new app to your iPad or iPhone to get one week of access to our digital newspapers absolutely FREE.
I believe the issue is that Fred Goodwin was ‘invited to retire’. (rather than being sacked or made redundant, as many very good employees are suffering now, because of the results of the ‘credit crunch’)
As a retiree, he is of course entitled to a pension, but at less than retiring age, why is it so much?)(to many, an obscene amount..how much a week does a normal ‘pensioner’ live on?)
An enquiry should be launched into how well he performed within the framework of the banking scene since he took over.
my wife and I have banked with HBOS since they were a Good Reliable BSoc. and changed into a Sales driven greedy, unreliable bunch of Bankers..
(Anybody got a similar view???)
Report abuse