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    Big bankers defend against critics amid crisis

    Big bankers defend selves against critics despite financial crisis that has left many jobless

    DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) -- Leading bankers at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, are on the defensive amid demands to regulate their industry more closely following the financial crisis that battered the global economy.

    Bankers have been widely blamed for the financial crisis that has dramatically reduced the living standards of many in the world, whether they're in work or not.

    "We're doing the right thing," Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JP Morgan Chase & Co., said Wednesday.

    Dimon, who last week took a 50 percent cut in pay for last year following a multibillion dollar trading loss in London, stressed the key role of banks in making the economy work, and insisted many of the bad practices of the recent past were being phased out.

    Regulators, he said, were "trying to do too much, too fast."

    Banks have spent much of the past few years in a bunker, getting on with shoring up their tarnished finances — and that's spelled difficulties for many in need to get their hands on money they need. Given its importance to the global economy, many reforms have been called for to make them work better for society as a whole. One solution being espoused around the world is to siphon off risky trading activities from traditional banking such as taking deposits and granting loans.

    Bankers have borne a large chunk of the blame — many say the lion's share — for the fragile state of the global economy.

    The financial crisis, which bared its teeth in the summer of 2007, started when banks effectively admitted they didn't have a full understanding of many of the investments they had been making. Notably, they took heavy losses in the U.S. on complex investments based on mortgages to people with shaky credit. Just over a year later, Wall Street luminary Lehman Brothers had collapsed, among others.

    Though the world economy is growing after its deepest recession since World War II, the fallout from the crisis remains. A United Nations body said Tuesday that the number of unemployed around the world will rise to a record 202 million this year, while many countries, particularly in Europe, struggle to post any growth at all.

    Dimon said the banks were getting an overly bad press, that there was "huge misinformation" out there about what they are doing to get things right.

    For example, he said banks had "twice as much capital as before" to pad against losses and that JP Morgan had helped clients raise money for socially-important projects in schools and hospitals.

    Axel Weber, a former central banker and current chairman of Swiss-based bank UBS, acknowledged the "excesses" of the past but said it was pointless to debate breaking up banks.

    "Where does the financial sector start or stop?" he asked. "It's so intricately linked that we shouldn't throw out the baby with the bathwater .... We all provide valuable social functions."

    Both spoke in Davos at the annual gathering of more than 2,500 corporate and political leaders.

    Among those questioning the bankers' assertion that the financial sector is doing fine and doing its job was Min Zhu, deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund.

    "The financial sector is too big," he said. "The products are too complicated. Transparency is not there. In this sense, I say the financial sector still has a long way to go."

    Andrei Kostin, chairman of Russia's VTB Bank argued it was governments who ran up excess debts — and not banks — and were largely to blame for recent economic troubles.

    "We should have better regulations but not necessarily more," he said.

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