EU finance
ministers have agreed to basic guidelines, governing when the eurozone's
permanent bailout fund can step in to rescue failed banks. Before, the fund
could directly finance governments only.
Finance
ministers from the 17 eurozone countries agreed on Thursday to make 60 billion
euros available ($79 billion) for stabilizing banks, in an effort to prevent
failed financial institutions from bankrupting entire nations.
The money
would come from the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), the eurozone's
500-billion-euro permanent bailout fund. Under previous rules, the ESM could
directly finance governments only. Those governments, as in the case of Spain,
could then use the money to stabilize their banks.
"Today,
we took an important step on the way toward setting up a bank union, by
agreeing to the main points for the future regulation of direct bank
recapitalization," German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble said in
Luxembourg, where the 17 ministers were meeting.
Step toward
banking union
Eurozone
member states such as Cyprus and Ireland have already been forced to seek
sovereign bailouts due to failed banking sectors. Under pressure from mounting
fiscal problems in Spain and Italy, the eurozone agreed last year to form a
banking union. One of the reasons for forming the union was to empower the ESM
to directly bailout failed banks.
"This
instrument will help preserve the stability of the euro area and help [remove]
the risk of contagion from the financial sector to the states," eurozone
chief Jeroen Dijsselbloem said.
According
to Thursday's agreement, states would still have to contribute a small sum
toward saving their banks. Initially, they would finance 20 percent of a
bailout. But there are plans to eventually reduce that participation to 10
percent. The reduction is expected to occur in 2016, two years after the
scheduled implementation of direct eurozone bank bailouts.
The ESM
money designated for banks has been limited to 60 billion euros, in order to
preserve the permanent bailout fund's top-notch credit rating. Lending to banks
is considered riskier than lending to governments, the ESM's main job.
Although
some basic guidelines have now been set, two other major components of the
banking union still need to be hashed out. First, the eurozone has to agree on
how to unwind bad banks. Second, the currency bloc has to establish a
Europe-wide joint deposit guarantee.
Guidelines
on how to unwind bad banks will be discussed during the finance ministers
meeting on Friday.
slk/jm (AP, AFP, dpa, Reuters)
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