Eurozone finance ministers (Eurogroup) failed to agree on Thursday (17 June) on a calendar to complete the banking union with a common deposit insurance scheme, as Germany continued to oppose any progress unless member states address other issues, including bank exposure to sovereign debt.
Last December, euro area leaders tasked their finance ministers with
preparing “on a consensual basis, a stepwise and time-bound work plan on
all outstanding elements needed to complete the banking union”.
The Eurogroup was expected to agree on the calendar on Thursday, in time for the next euro summit on 25 June.
But Germany’s finance minister, Olaf Scholz, made it clear that the
deal was not in sight as he made his way into the first in-person
Eurogroup in months.
“We are not ready for an agreement today and this week,” he told reporters in Luxembourg, where the meeting took place.
A majority of member states and a long list of institutions,
including the European Commission, the European Central Bank, the
European Parliament, the International Monetary Fund, or the European
Stability Mechanism, have been strong advocates of completing the
banking union with a European Deposit Insurance Scheme (EDIS) to protect
savers up to €100,000 across the euro area.
The benefits of the banking union are “very, very strong”, ESM
Managing Director Klaus Regling said after the Eurogroup concluded on
Thursday.
But Germany continues to be the main obstacle to creating the
long-awaited common guarantee for depositors, in spite of the reduction
of non-performing loans seen across the banking sector since the
financial crisis.
Scholz said that “we are working very hard to make a breakthrough on
the banking union question feasible”. But he added he was sure that
“this will take a lot of time still because there are a lot of
questions” about what we need as a “holistic approach”.
Finance ministers on Thursday (7 November) welcomed a German
initiative to unblock proposals for a common bank deposit guarantee
scheme in the eurozone, but questioned Berlin’s request to ask
additional capital buffers in return for banks holding sovereign debt.
Scholz referred to the proposal he made in November 2019 to unlock
the discussion. In an opinion piece published by the Financial Times, he
said he would consider EDIS if there was progress on some other
sensitive areas.
Among other proposals, he said member states should discuss ways to
reduce bank exposure to sovereign debt, a complex issue that could
trigger a systemic reaction across the financial sector if national
bonds are no longer considered as risk-free assets.
The discussions continued at a technical level, including hybrid
formulas for EDIS proposed as intermediary stages, but with little
results.
The president of the Eurogroup, Paschal Donohoe, said on Thursday
after the meeting that “we made progress, but we need to make more
progress”.
The probability of liquidity shortfalls to protect bank depositors in
a new 2008-like crisis would be cut by half if the EU completed the
banking union with a European Deposit Insurance Scheme, according to a
European Commission analysis seen by EURACTIV.com.
All member states, he explained, remain committed to reaching an
agreement on the banking union, but “more imagination and effort” are
needed to progress at the same time on the four work streams currently
under discussion.
These four areas are EDIS, the regulatory treatment of sovereign
exposures and financial stability, crisis management, and enhanced
cross-border integration.
Donohoe, who made the banking union one of his priorities as
Eurogroup president, said he wants to reach a consensus on a work plan
that is “credible, ambitious and effective”.
A senior EU diplomat, however, pointed out the difficulties of
reaching an ambitious agreement before the German elections in
September.
Donohoe explained that ministers will return to the issue by the end
of the year. Once there is an agreement on the calendar, the Commission
is expected to come forward with a new proposal on EDIS and to complete
the banking union.
The European Commission is considering tabling a new proposal on the
European Deposit Insurance Scheme (EDIS) in a bid to break the
long-running deadlock and complete the banking union, a Commission
official has said.
EURACTIV
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