Rebuilding trust: Why Australia’s banks should welcome a public inquiry

Rebuilding customer trust after a crisis is a long-term exercise for any organisation. After decades of trust erosion at the hands of Australia’s banks, a Royal Commission could be the only way forward, writes Peter Wilkinson.

Criticism imposes confronting choices on an organisation. And repeated criticism, particularly in the media, starts a downward spiral, eroding trust, inspiring more criticism, further eroding trust and so on.

The most visible illustration of that is what is happening with slow-learning politicians globally, who repeatedly demonstrate an inability to respond to voters’ concerns.

But the same applies elsewhere. It used to be that trust was automatically bestowed on company executives including bankers, as well as lawyers and medical professionals: “I trusted my doctor”.

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