Google – AFP, 19 December 2013
Brussels —
EU finance ministers Wednesday reached a banking union accord which will hand
Brussels unprecedented new powers to prevent failing banks from wrecking the
economy, official sources said.
"We
have an accord," a French finance ministry source said after another long
day of hard talks marked by sharp differences over key elements of the new bank
regulatory system.
"Momentous
day for #bankingunion," EU Financial Markets Commissioner Michel Barnier
said in a tweeted message.
"Agreement
by (member states)...for single resolution mechanism. Negotiations with
(European Parliament) can now start," Barnier said.
The Single
Resolution Mechanism will close failing banks before they can damage the wider
economy and along with a new supervisory regime, forms the banking union.
This was
drawn up in response to the financial and then debt crises which brought down
many banks and nearly drove the eurozone to its knees as governments had to be
bailed out after rescuing their lenders.
The new
framework means a big pooling of sovereignty and would mark a big step towards
EU cross-border authority, explaining in large part why the talks have taken
over a year to get this far.
A key
sticking point, especially between France and Germany, has been who will have
the final say in deciding to close a bank and how this will be paid for.
The plan is
for the banks to contribute to a special fund for this purpose, phased in over
10 years, so that the taxpayer will no longer have to foot the bill.
However,
the fund is unlikely to be enough in the interim period and there have been
tortuous discussions over how it could find additional or "backstop"
financing.
According
to a draft document seen by AFP, bridge financing could come either from the
member states or from the eurozone's own rescue fund, the European Stability
Mechanism.
Used for
national bailouts, drawing on the ESM usually comes with tough policy
conditions, but it was used controversially to provide some 41 billion euros to
Spanish banks directly in 2012 without such terms.
The final
winding up fund -- estimated at 55 billion euros -- will also have a backstop
to provide additional finance if needed, with the banking sector ultimately
liable for it.
Finance
ministers from the 28-country bloc were under pressure to produce a deal which
EU leaders could then approve at a summit Thursday and Friday.
Once that
is done, the proposal will go to the European Parliament for what are also
expected to be tough negotiations on a final form.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.