Small investors in RBS are pushing
for the bank to set up a shareholder committee to give them a bigger say
in areas such as executive pay.

Groups representing small shareholders argue they should be involved in ensuring good corporate governance.
Investors hope RBS will serve as a test case so other companies will consider installing a shareholder committee.
RBS said it had not seen full details but pledged to "look closely" at it once it had.
The
way companies are managed - and how much bosses are paid - has been
been under particular scrutiny this year following the collapse and loss
of 11,000 jobs at BHS and the revelations about pay and working
conditions at Sports Direct.
Chief executives of FTSE 100
companies have a median pay package of £4.3m, according to the High Pay
Centre, which works out at 140 times that of the average worker.
In November, the government issued a Green Paper to explore improving how companies are run.
It
proposed that a shareholder committee could be set up "to scrutinise
remuneration and other key corporate issues such as long term strategy
and directors' appointments".
The UK Individual Shareholders'
Society (ShareSoc) and the UK Shareholders' Association (UKSA), who
represent retail (individual) investors, said: "We suggest that this
initiative will significantly benefit corporate governance at RBS, and
represents a valuable opportunity for RBS to lead the way in exploring a
concept which works well in other countries."
ShareSoc and UKSA
will present RBS with a resolution for the proposal to be included on
the agenda at the bank's annual general meeting in May, where investors
would then be given the chance to vote on the measure.
A spokesman
for RBS, said: "We have not yet received the final draft resolution.
Once it has been delivered we will look closely to ensure that it
complies with all corporate governance and listing guidelines."
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