Banking Overview
How much do you know about your bank? Do you know what type of businesses it lends to?
Does it refuse to lend to companies with poor human rights records, that sell arms or pollute the environment, for example? Does your bank offer services to those on low incomes or the unemployed? And how many women sit on its board?
Such questions often go unasked of the banking sector. But the same caring principles that make you buy Fairtrade goods and recycle household waste can be applied to how you bank too.
Key green and ethical issues to consider
Finding a green or ethical banking option
How banks use your money
The money that you deposit in your current or savings account doesn't just sit there untouched until you require it again - your bank lends it on to others at interest.
Banks don't just lend money to current account-holding customers either, they lend to large corporations, public institutions and even governments.
As many banks are listed on the stock exchange, they are answerable to external shareholders who expect healthy returns on their investments.
While the Treasury hands down some prohibitions as to who banks can and can't do business with, it still leaves them relatively free to engage with companies that you might not approve of and they use your money to do it.
Would you approve if your bank was lending money to heavy polluting industries or even to an oppressive regime?
Key green and ethical issues to consider
Responsible Lending
The recent global economic downturn is often attributed to the 'sub prime crisis'.
Sub prime lending means giving loans to people who are considered to be in higher risk categories - those more likely to default or who have a poor credit history, for example.
This type of lending is not problematic in itself - credit unions and community development finance institutions regularly lend to sub prime candidates. Instead, irresponsible lending to customers in the sub prime category is the problem.
In the build up to the 'crunch' some financial institutions were lending 100% mortgages (and in some cases more) to people who would not be able to make their repayments in the long term.
Lending responsibly shouldn't be limited to just mortgages - it applies to all loans, big and small, and to the provision of credit cards too. Figures from the Bank of England show that UK residents owe £233bn on credit cards, overdrafts and other loans.
Key questions to ask: Does your bank have responsible lending policies that ensure that its products are targeted in an appropriate manner? And does it provide advice or debt management services to customers who fall into financial difficulty?
Climate Change and the Environment
Banks have an impact in these areas, not just in terms of who they lend to or invest in, but how they run their own operations. It is important to find out what your bank is doing to improve its environmental performance as a business: have they pledged to go carbon neutral for example? Or do they offer any green products to their customers?
Financial Exclusion
There are an estimated two million people in the UK without even the most basic bank account. Is your bank doing anything to address this situation?
For more details see our Financial Exclusion section.
Project Finance
In its most basic form, this type of financing is for companies and governments where lenders are repaid through the revenues generated, i.e. the lender has a vested interest in the success of a project.
Common projects receiving finance are petrochemical and chemical plants, power plants, telecommunications and infrastructure. But do lenders ensure that these projects are conducted in a green or ethical way?
Use our search facility to find out about your bank's policy on the environment, ethical lending, responsibility towards its customers, equal opportunities and other issues.
Finding a green or ethical banking option
Building Societies and Credit Unions
Mutual building societies and credit unions are generally smaller, customer-owned operations that primarily lend to individuals and so are less likely to have the same exposure to issues like the arms trade, for example.
Green and Ethical Alternatives
There are a number of banks and building societies with prominent green and ethical credentials. The four examples listed below also scored the highest marks on ethical lending in our research:
- Co-operative Bank: this bank's robust green and ethical policies govern its current accounts, savings and investment products.
- Smile: this internet arm of the Co-operative Bank shares the parent company's ethical policy.
- Triodos Bank: this bank offers green and ethical savings accounts and investments. The bank was established in 1980 in the Netherlands and now has significant operations in the UK.
- Ecology Building Society: this mutual building society offers a range of green savings accounts and mortgage options.
You can use the banking section search to find the banks that perform best against our green and ethical criteria.
Your next steps
What do you do now? Check out our guide Next Steps - Banking for information on how to give your bank account a green and ethical makeover.
Banking Search
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Bank / Building Society Profile
Yorkshire Building Society
Green/Ethical Products
- Flexible Home Energy Efficiency Additional Loan (restricted to Yorkshire BS’s mortgage customers only)
Ethical Lending or Insurance
No details of an ethical lending policy was found. However, as this is a mutual building society it is less likely to lend or be exposed to typically ‘unethical’ commercial interests.
Responsible Lending
1. Credit Lending
Yorkshire Building Society offers a LTV (loan-to-value) up to 85% of the purchase price or valuation for the property. This compares favourably with the FSA’s Turner Review suggestion of a maximum LTV of 90%, i.e. the borrower should have at least a 10% deposit.
Figures for its LTI (loan-to-income) rates were not found. In this instance the Turner reviews a rate of 3.5 times gross annual income for single applicants.
The building society may use an automated system, such as credit scoring, to assist in its lending decisions. It does not specify whether it runs checks through credit reference agencies either.
2. Debt Warning
The building society issues the following warnings to its customers:
- ‘Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage or any other debt secured on it.’
- ‘Consolidating your debt may increase the amount you pay back overall and extend the repayment period for your debts.’
No evidence was found that the building society uses or recommends the FSA Debt Test or an equivalent. This facility is designed to help customers find out whether they have, or are likely to have, problems with borrowing.
3. Debt Management and Advice
In outlining its policies with regard to customers in financial difficulty, the building society says it will:
- Contact customers ‘as soon as possible’ to discuss their situation
- Look at arranging a new payment plan
- Consider changing the way payments are made, or the date they are made
- Allow customers to pay their mortgage over a longer period of time, thus reducing monthly payments
- Change the type of mortgage the customer has
- Arrange for debt counsellor visit (the cost may be charged to the mortgage account)
- Give customers ‘reasonable time’ to pay back the debt
- Talk to an agency like Citizens Advice Bureau to arrange a payment plan, if requested
It further outlines the steps involved in the repossession process.
Payment holidays are offered to customers who have previously overpaid their mortgage up to the amount they have overpaid only.
No information was found with regard to provisions for customers with unsecured loans experiencing financial difficulty.
No evidence was found that the building society offers re-housing advice or liaises with organisations such as Shelter and the Citizens Advice Bureau to work out re-housing arrangements with mortgage customers facing repossession.
Financial Exclusion
The society does not offer any products or services to the financially excluded, nor does it appear to work in partnership with credit unions or offer preferential lending within deprived communities based on the data in the public arena. As a mutual building society funding microfinance projects is beyond its business remit.
The society does offer branch accessibility to customers with mobility difficulties; blind and partially sighted customers; and deaf, hearing impaired and speech impaired customers. Most branches include:
- Staff who are informed about disability issues
- Level access or wheelchair ramps or assistance buttons at entrance
- Power assisted entrance doors
- Hearing aid induction loops
- Sign language interpreters by appointment
- The ability to request account correspondence and marketing literature in alternative formats
Environment
The society expresses a commitment to improve its performance in the key areas of energy efficiency and waste management.
Carbon Neutral
The society’s business operations went carbon neutral in 2007.
Equal Opportunities
The society’s equal opportunities policy addresses the key issues of gender, race, disability and sexuality.
Women on the Board
18.2% of the society's board are women according to 2007 figures.
Voluntary Standards & Initiatives
None
Charitable Giving
The society donated 0.62% of its pre-tax profits in 2007.
Yorkshire Building Society
- Savings
- Loans
- Credit Cards
- Mortgages
- Insurance (Motor, Home, Life, Mortgage Protection)
Yorkshire Building Society
Yorkshire Building Society
Yorkshire House
Yorkshire Drive
Bradford
West Yorkshire
BD5 8LJ











