Daily Mail

Building society boss pockets £3.4m fat cat pay cheque

- by James Burton

CAMPAIGNER­S have blasted the hypocrisy of Britain’s biggest building society after it paid new chieff executive Joe Garner £3.4m.

The bonanza is comparable to payouts s for FTSE 100 bosses and seriously undermines the mutual’s claim that it is different to City banks.

Nationwide has staked its reputation­n on being an alternativ­e and wants to be seen as a trusted national treasure.

Garner, 47, is himself critical of City y short-termism which puts stock prices above the needs of customers. But critics last night warned his stratosphe­ric pay y packet damaged Nationwide’s cuddly y image and suggested it was just like every other lender. His whopping deall came as profits dived 17pc to £1.1bn.

Liberal Democrat MP and former business secretary Vince Cable said: ‘Nationwide is behaving like a typical aggressive commercial bank rather than a mutual. Plenty of very successful companies operate without the extreme levels of remunerati­on you see at Nationwide and elsewhere.’

Stefan Stern of the High Pay Centre said: ‘Nationwide does need to be very careful, considerin­g it positions itself as the alternativ­e to the big banks and high street banking. They want to be seen as boring and sensible, not like the others,others so it’s veryer sur-sur prising to see them joining in the drive to ratchet up pay.’

Garner, who joined in April last year, pocketed an £840,000 base salary in the year to April 4, plus a £ 958,000 cash bonus and £336,000 pension allowance. He also got benefits worth £181,000 of health insurance, a car allowance and use of a driver.

This is an unusually high figure even by City standards, and more than the benefits paid to Lloyds boss Antonio Horta-Osorio.Horta Osorio On top of this, the married father-ofone picked up a £1.1m golden hello. Garner earned just £6,000 less than Bill Winters, the boss of internatio­nal banking giant Standard Chartered.

Nationwide has 15m savers and borrowers, has largely avoided the mis- selling and fraud scandals and is seen by customers as a trusted ethical lender.

It made a £1.1bn profit in its last financial year, down from £1.3bn. Nationwide sources acknowledg­ed Garner’s earnings were high but argued it was important to pay for talent which would otherwise go elsewhere.

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 ??  ?? Criticism: Boss Joe Garner
Criticism: Boss Joe Garner

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