European Commission Green Paper on the feasibility of introducing stability bonds

23 November 2011

This assesses the feasibility of common issuance of sovereign bonds among the Member States of the eurozone. The introduction of commonly-issued stability bonds would mean a pooling of sovereign issuance among the Member States and sharing of associated revenue flows and debt-servicing costs.

The Green Paper published by the European Commission structures the political debate in the EU on the rationale, pre-conditions and possible options of financing public debt through Stability Bonds. Such common issuance of bonds by the euro area Member States would imply a significant deepening of Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). It would create new means through which governments finance their debt, by offering safe and liquid investment opportunities for savers and financial institutions and by setting up a euro-area-wide integrated bond market that matches its US dollar counterpart in terms of size and liquidity. The fiscal framework underlying EMU would similarly undergo a substantial change, as Stability Bonds would need to be accompanied by closer and stricter fiscal surveillance to ensure budgetary discipline. Some of the options for the design of stability bonds considered in the Green Paper might require a Treaty change. Regardless of any necessary time for implementation, agreement on common issuance could have an immediate impact on market expectations and thereby lower average and marginal funding costs for those Member States currently facing funding pressures.

The Green Paper does not indentify any preferred option or way forward. Instead, the documents open and structure a wide public debate on appropriate next steps and possibly more concrete steps in this matter.

The many possible options for common issuance of stability bonds can be categorised in three broad approaches, based on the degree of substitution of national issuance (full or partial) and the nature of the underlying guarantee (joint and several or several) implied. The three broad approaches examined in the Green Paper are:

The consultation is open until January 8, 2012.


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