The City confronts the case for slavery reparations
slavery and the bank
The Bank of England has apologised for its involvement in the slave trade and is currently running an exhibition on the subject

Three years after the murder of George Floyd by a police officer in Minneapolis kicked off a wave of protests about racial inequality, financial institutions are still reckoning with their past.

Lloyd’s of London, the world’s largest insurance market, is preparing to reject the case to pay direct reparations to the descendants of slaves whose transport it insured, it emerged last week.

After conducting research to better understand its role in the slave trade with Johns Hopkins University in the US, Lloyd’s is instead preparing to fund diversity initiatives aimed at tackling racial inequality.

It is understood that Lloyd’s has struggled to identify who would directly receive reparations. An update is expected soon.

However, such a move could set the insurer up for a clash with Caribbean nations and interest groups who are calling for direct transfers to the descendants of slaves, rather than investment in broader support schemes.

It is understood that formal letters are being prepared by national reparations commissions in the Caribbean to put the case to institutions including Lloyd’s of London by the end of the year.

Is the City doing enough to confront its slave-sponsoring past?

Despite happening more than 4,000 miles away, George Floyd’s death had significant reverberations across the Square Mile. A conversation about racial justice ignited debate over the City’s role in financing, facilitating and benefitting from the international slave trade. The long history of the area’s most storied institutions meant several had direct links.

black lives matter protest
George Floyd’s murder in 2020 had significant reverberations around the world - Victoria Jones/PA

Insurance marketplace Lloyd’s of London, which grew out of the coffee houses of 17th-century London, and the Bank of England, founded in 1694, subsequently apologised for their “shameful” and “inexcusable” roles in the Atlantic slave trade.

At the time, Hilary Beckles, chairman of the Caricom (Caribbean Community) Reparations Commission, which was set up by Caribbean nations to seek reparations from former colonial powers such as the UK, said: “It is not enough to say sorry.”

Reparations commissions are pushing for direct financial transfers, rather than words, exhibitions and investment in broader schemes aimed at improving opportunities for those affected by the legacy of colonialism.

Lloyd’s ties to the slave trade date back to 17th century. It is estimated that between 1640 and the early 19th century, more than three million enslaved African people were transported by Britain’s shipping industry. Lloyd’s was the global centre for insuring that industry and underwrote enslaved people as part of a ship’s cargo.