UK-EU Customs Union Debate

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Department: Cabinet Office

UK-EU Customs Union

Lord Pitt-Watson Excerpts
Thursday 29th January 2026

(1 day, 8 hours ago)

Lords Chamber
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Lord Pitt-Watson Portrait Lord Pitt-Watson (Lab) (Maiden Speech)
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My Lords, it is with great pleasure that I rise in this debate to make my maiden speech. I should begin by giving thanks to all Members of the House for their warmth, their welcome and their generosity: to the Garter King of Arms, Black Rod, the Clerk of the Parliaments, the doorkeepers and all the others who work here; to my noble friends Lady Smith of Basildon and Lord Kennedy of Southwark; and to my noble friends Lord Wilson of Sedgefield and Lord McNicol of West Kilbride, who introduced me to the House.

I would also like to thank the noble Lord, Lord Stephen, for remembering my mother. She was a music teacher. My dad was a Church of Scotland minister, so I think that, like a few Members of this House, I am a child of the manse. But my career has been in business, particularly in finance, which is what I would like to talk about today.

For Britain, finance is the real jewel in the crown of our economy. It is 9% of our economy, but it earns for us a trade surplus of £70 billion, much of that through the European Union, so the finance industry is critical to any element when we think about our trade. But it is not just self-interest that makes the finance industry so important. Finance is central to the solution of the big problems of the world. It is almost impossible to imagine a prosperous economy without a successful finance industry. I led the finance initiative at the Paris climate talks; we will not solve the climate problem unless the finance industry is on board with that. If you look at poverty in the developing world—I was treasurer of Oxfam—and if we are to get people out of poverty, they need financial services. If you look at innovation—I chaired the endowment at Nesta—again we need the money and the stewardship to make sure that that innovation can take place.

The main part of my financial career was in another element: it was about the power of the finance industry and how that is exercised. Because the finance industry holds the shares in companies, that gives them the opportunity to approve or otherwise the boards of directors and therefore to have great influence. That influence needs to be seen through the eyes of the savers—the millions of people who save through their pensions into the finance industry. Of course, they want profitable companies, but they also want companies that pay regard to the society and the environment in which they trade.

The greatest part of my finance career was with an entrepreneurial pension fund called Hermes, and we worked very strongly on that. We encouraged people to get together on that as well. I consider myself one of the midwives of Principles for Responsible Investment, which now has over $100 trillion of investors signed up to it—and it is based in the UK. It was not just me—there were many people who were involved—but the UK is the centre in the world of responsible investment and of people trying to make sure that our money is used well for the people that it ought to be used for.

But there is another, less rosy side. We all remember the global financial crisis. There are many failures in the financial system. It is not highly regarded by the people of Britain. Most critically, when academics study the financial system, the cost of taking money from point A in the outside world and investing it where it is needed in point B has hardly fallen over 100 years. That is a real challenge.

But such challenges, I think, can also be big opportunities. I have a professional interest in working on thinking about pension structures. We believe it is possible that, with a better pension structure for the same cost, people who are saving for their pension could be enjoying a reliable income in retirement maybe 30% higher than they are currently getting through the UK system.

The other thing I do is teach. I teach finance at Cambridge on a course that is considered radical. It is called The Purpose of Finance, and it simply asks the students to debate what is the purpose of this industry at which Britain excels. It is not just about analysis, and it is not just about markets and regulation. It is also about institutions and innovation and cultures and governance and incentives and professionalism.

Finance is critical. It is critical to this debate about the trade relationship with Europe. It is a jewel in our economic crown. As we think about finance, we surely want that industry to grow and to prosper, because it is purposeful in delivering to the outside world—as all commerce should be. In the future, as part of my work here, I hope I can contribute to the House’s deliberations on these sorts of matters.