Mrs Bennett added: "What's not being addressed is the fundamental issue that while we have an overly-large banking sector, it isn't meeting the needs of the 'real economy'. The extreme case of Iceland demonstrated the dangers of having a swollen banking system – which five years after the financial crisis is still what Britain has. In order to rebalance our economy, to bring manufacturing and food production back to Britain, we need a trusted, reliable, locally based banking system. It is a great political failure that no concrete steps have been taken towards this.
Mrs Bennett concluded by saying: "We don't need and cannot afford the risk of a 'international banking sector' that pays miniscule amounts of tax, provides few jobs, and puts at risk our financial security and stability.
Mrs Bennett concluded by saying: "We don't need and cannot afford the risk of a 'international banking sector' that pays miniscule amounts of tax, provides few jobs, and puts at risk our financial security and stability.