Chamber
Plenary, 01 Mar 2007
01 Mar 2007 · S2 · Plenary
Item of business
Illegal Moneylenders
I hope that the SNP will support us in opposition. We will invite our partners, such as Citizens Advice Scotland, Money Advice Scotland and local authorities, to consider how to go further with local community development, so that vulnerable people are not thrown back on illegal lenders.
For our part, we will continue our efforts to begin financial education as early as possible in schools and in settings such as the workplace and the community. We welcome the support of financial institutions such as Lloyds TSB, which are concerned about the unbanked and those who do not access traditional forms of credit. Our aim has to be to reduce to the minimum the number of people who feel that no option is available to them to raise immediate cash. Prevention is a much better option to protect people from loan sharks, and we will do everything possible to reduce the demand. However, I am quite clear: we will also take the appropriate enforcement steps to deal with those people who prey on the poorest and most vulnerable people in our communities.
I move,
That the Parliament condemns the activities of illegal money lenders who prey on and exploit vulnerable individuals and communities; welcomes the Scottish Executive's determination to work in partnership with the UK Government to tackle illegal lending through enforcement and by developing new approaches, such as the successful illegal money lending task force pilots, and supports the Executive's activity to help affected individuals by increasing affordable credit from credit unions, by improving the availability of money advice, through citizens' advice, local authority trading standards departments and other organisations which provide invaluable help to those with unmanageable debt, and by extending financial education in schools and in other settings such as the workplace and the community.
For our part, we will continue our efforts to begin financial education as early as possible in schools and in settings such as the workplace and the community. We welcome the support of financial institutions such as Lloyds TSB, which are concerned about the unbanked and those who do not access traditional forms of credit. Our aim has to be to reduce to the minimum the number of people who feel that no option is available to them to raise immediate cash. Prevention is a much better option to protect people from loan sharks, and we will do everything possible to reduce the demand. However, I am quite clear: we will also take the appropriate enforcement steps to deal with those people who prey on the poorest and most vulnerable people in our communities.
I move,
That the Parliament condemns the activities of illegal money lenders who prey on and exploit vulnerable individuals and communities; welcomes the Scottish Executive's determination to work in partnership with the UK Government to tackle illegal lending through enforcement and by developing new approaches, such as the successful illegal money lending task force pilots, and supports the Executive's activity to help affected individuals by increasing affordable credit from credit unions, by improving the availability of money advice, through citizens' advice, local authority trading standards departments and other organisations which provide invaluable help to those with unmanageable debt, and by extending financial education in schools and in other settings such as the workplace and the community.
In the same item of business
The Presiding Officer (Mr George Reid):
NPA
Good morning. The first item of business is a debate on motion S2M-5669, in the name of Des McNulty, on dealing with illegal moneylenders.
The Deputy Minister for Communities (Des McNulty):
Lab
We are here this morning to discuss the problem of loan sharks. By "loan sharks" I mean those who break the law by lending money, often at extortionate inter...
Stewart Stevenson (Banff and Buchan) (SNP):
SNP
I join the minister in unreservedly condemning the actions of illegal moneylenders. How successful have we been, under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 or othe...
Des McNulty:
Lab
I can give the member some figures in relation to the activities of the Glasgow illegal moneylending team. To date, 500 people have benefited from the prosec...
Christine Grahame (South of Scotland) (SNP):
SNP
Now there is an admission.
Des McNulty:
Lab
I hope that the SNP will support us in opposition. We will invite our partners, such as Citizens Advice Scotland, Money Advice Scotland and local authorities...
Mr Kenny MacAskill (Lothians) (SNP):
SNP
In moving the amendment in my name, I say that we do not disagree with anything that the minister said. Clearly, the Executive is flagging up an issue that h...
Margaret Mitchell (Central Scotland) (Con):
Con
I very much welcome this important debate, which focuses on what has become a huge problem throughout the UK—namely, consumer debt and the activities of ille...
Mr Jamie Stone (Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross) (LD):
LD
The debate is a worthwhile one. I am indebted to the Rev Graham Blount for all his work on the issue. He is known to all of us, and is the secretary of the c...
Bill Aitken (Glasgow) (Con):
Con
Is Mr Stone aware that much of the collection, intimidation and threatening behaviour that illegal moneylenders carry out is done on the streets and street c...
Mr Stone:
LD
I take that point, but my point is that those activities are not overt, but covert. The police work that is involved has to be much more detailed and clever ...
Christine Grahame:
SNP
From the member's comments, it seems that he supports the statement in the SNP amendment about the burden that legal moneylending puts on people. Is that the...
Mr Stone:
LD
I am attracted to the SNP amendment, but the trouble is that I do not support separation, as I have said elsewhere. The motion and both amendments have merit...
Trish Godman (West Renfrewshire) (Lab):
Lab
Some time ago—in 2002, I think—I was fortunate enough to secure a members' business debate on loan sharks. The Daily Record was running a campaign to expose ...
Ms Sandra White (Glasgow) (SNP):
SNP
The minister said that the debate is about loan sharks—illegal moneylenders who do not have a licence to lend money. However, does he believe that it is okay...
Members:
Oh, come on!
Ms White:
SNP
Members can intervene if they wish.
Cathie Craigie (Cumbernauld and Kilsyth) (Lab):
Lab
If we take the member's argument to its logical conclusion, is the SNP saying that it would make tenants pay for repairs to owner-occupiers' houses? Does she...
Ms White:
SNP
Owner-occupiers are quite happy to pay for repairs to their homes, but they simply cannot afford to pay £7,000 within a year. I want the minister to clarify ...
Patrick Harvie (Glasgow) (Green):
Green
I welcome the opportunity to debate this issue. However, I struggled to find any information about issues such as credit unions and the debt arrangement sche...
Christine May (Central Fife) (Lab):
Lab
Members have made some very good speeches on an issue that we are all concerned about, even if we have slightly different views on how to solve it.Unlike Pat...
Colin Fox (Lothians) (SSP):
SSP
I wonder whether the minister is familiar with the lines that Woody Guthrie sang:"Some will rob you with a six-gunAnd some with a fountain pen."In the motion...
Mr Stone:
LD
I mentioned it.
Colin Fox:
SSP
Mr Stone also mentioned it, but he underplayed it, too. I will tell members why.Today, the Royal Bank of Scotland declared profits of £9.7 billion and, yeste...
Helen Eadie (Dunfermline East) (Lab):
Lab
I join the minister in condemning illegal moneylenders unreservedly. He was right to say that there are many threads in the strategy to tackle the issue. The...
Bill Aitken (Glasgow) (Con):
Con
Despite there being two amendments to the Executive's motion, the debate so far has been largely consensual. The Conservatives acknowledge the efforts that t...
Christine Grahame:
SNP
I am interested to know how we can interfere with interest rates when we do not have the powers to do so in this Parliament. Is Mr Aitken suggesting that we ...
Bill Aitken:
Con
No—that is not what I am suggesting. I was careful in what I said so that no one would think that I was suggesting that. I was simply pointing out arguments ...
Colin Fox:
SSP
Perhaps Bill Aitken will unravel the great 21st century mystery of how the banks make their money. They lend at one rate and borrow at another. Is not that w...
Bill Aitken:
Con
That was a rather simplistic argument. On the basis of the equation that Colin Fox advances, the money that the banks make has not been made, to any great ex...