MADRID: As European taxpayers prepare to rescue Spain’s ailing banks, anti-corruption prosecutors, academics and regional parliaments are uncovering a tale of greed, cronyism and political meddling that has brought many of the country’s leading savings institutions to their knees.

With the fourth biggest lender, Bankia, demanding EUR19bn and authorities now admitting a further EUR9bn is needed by two former savings banks — CatalunyaCaixa and Novagalicia — concern is focusing on both the mushrooming bill and the way banks have been run.

Court investigators are also scrutinising payments to former senior executives and the part-flotation of Bankia, in which 350,000 small investors saw two-thirds of their money wiped out.

The bill that Europe's rescue funds must pay has been increased by the multi-million euro payoffs taken by some senior executives shortly before their banks collapsed and decisions taken by unqualified board members who admit they were incapable of analysing the banks’ books. Boards were stuffed with political placements or people who had little idea about banking — including, in one case, a supermarket checkout worker.

Trips to India, China or Chicago and the hundreds of millions of euros in loans to executives, board members and their families formed part of the gravy train of political favouritism and cronyism.

Chairmen were often unqualified politicians, with academic investigators finding a close relationship between the size of a bank's bad loan book and the inexperience, lack of qualifications and degree of politicisation of the chairman.

A committee in the Valencia regional parliament is looking into how the Caja de Ahorros del Mediterraneo (CAM) — described by the Bank of Spain as “the worst of the worst” — collapsed last July.

“Did I check through the accounts?” asked Jose Enrique Garrigos, a small businessman who was a CAM board member. “Look, I'm an average businessman, I don't have the time or the training to do that.”

He said that other board members at the savings bank, based in Alicante, included a checkout worker and a sociologist. A dance teacher, an artist and a university psychologist were also reportedly on the board.

Some board members have suggested that minutes of meetings may have been tampered with. They question, for example, whether they were ever really consulted on key matters such as executive pay or warnings from the Bank of Spain that the caja was in dire straits.

“I didn't see the official minutes as the law requires,” said Jesus Navarro, another board member. “Except on a computer screen.”

Analysing the accounts would have required her to be a superwoman, complained one CAM board member. “I didn't have sufficient financial, legal or accountancy skill... board members were not legally required to have any sort of qualifications or experience,” agreed fellow board member Juan Pacheco.

This left control of CAM in the hands of chairman Modesto Crespo, director general Roberto Lopez Abad and a few senior executives, they said, with the board effectively rubberstamping their decisions.

“There was barely any debate and votes were ... unanimous,” said Pacheco.

“One board meeting a year was held abroad,” said Navarro. “I refused to go on principle.” But he admitted attending a meeting hundreds of miles away in San Sebastian with some 50 other people: “Obviously I went with my wife, and the rest of the board took their partners too.”

Over six years, board members and senior executives — or their families — received EUR161m in loans, often at soft interest rates, according the Workers Commissions trade union. Senior executives doubled their salaries over the same period. Cajas as a whole gave senior management a 50 per cent pay rise over that period, though profits only rose 7 per cent, the union said.

Mireia Molla, a regional MP for the leftwing Compromis party, said a common way of getting round limits on paying board members at the not-for-profit CAM was to give them well-paid places on boards of companies owned — or part-owned — by the bank.

Local politicians appointed many board members and used cajas to fund pet projects.

“The use of cajas as the banks of regional governments is part of the origin of the problem,” said Alvar Anchuelo, an MP for the small, centrist Popular and Democratic Union party. “They used them to finance airports with no flights and theme parks that failed.”

Two days before the collapse of CAM, the bank reportedly loaned EUR200m to the cash-strapped regional government of Valencia — run by prime minister Mariano Rajoy's People's party, which also controlled most board appointments.

Part of CAM's senior management had opted for early retirement as the bank headed towards disaster, with six members, including director-general Lopez Abad, estimated to have left with payoffs jointly totalling more than EUR10m.

Similar stories of multimillion euro payments are emerging from other cajas, which have now been forced into takeovers or mergers to form commercial banks — with the savings banks as shareholders.

Bankia, for example, paid executive Matias Amat EUR6.2 m for taking early retirement. Bancaja, one of the seven cajas that merged to form Bankia, reportedly owes executive Aurelio Izquierdo EUR14m.

CAM was nationalised and sold for EUR1 to Banco Sabadell after receiving EUR3bn from Spain's bank restructuring fund — which now looks incapable of meeting the financing of other former savings banks.

Attempts to investigate Bankia have been blocked by the People's party in the national parliament and the Madrid regional assembly, but Spain's attorney general has admitted that it is under investigation. Twelve of the 45 cajas that existed three years ago are reportedly being looked at by anti-corruption investigators.

The Catalan parliament agreed on Friday to set up a committee to look at banking problems as a whole.

“If we really knew the truth about Bankia and the other cajas, the two big parties — the People's party and the socialists — would explode,” said Arsenio Escolar, editor of the 20 Minutos newspaper.

By arrangement with the Guardian

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