We have identified the urgent need for banks to recover profitability, improve cost efficiency, invest in digitalisation and enhance the sustainability of their business model. Healthy profitability is the first line of defence in the event of shocks...
Thank you for inviting me to deliver this address at the Institut
Montaigne. The Institut last year published a very topical report on the
future of banking in Europe.
The analytical part of the report points out the apparent paradox of a
banking sector that has re-built significant strength and resilience,
but still shows structurally low profitability and depressed market
valuations. Indeed, also from our supervisory perspective, we can be
satisfied with the achievements of the regulatory reforms in
strengthening banks’ balance sheets and the progress in dealing with the
legacy of non-performing assets since the start of the banking union.
This new resilience has proved fundamental in supporting households,
small businesses and corporates during the pandemic, and is currently an
important defence against the adverse effects of the war in Ukraine on
our economy. At the same time, we have also identified the urgent need
for banks to recover profitability, improve cost efficiency, invest in
digitalisation and enhance the sustainability of their business model.
Healthy profitability is the first line of defence in the event of
shocks and a pre-requisite for banks’ ability to attract investors and
raise capital if needed. Therefore, when the Institut’s report calls on
banks to reinvent their business model, this resonates with us and is
well aligned with the ECB’s supervisory priorities.
But the report
also correctly laments the incomplete nature of the banking union and
the fragmentation of our banking sector, requesting policymakers to “[…]
play their part to revitalise the banking sector by relaunching the
European project”.
This is the topic I would like to focus on today. In light of the current ongoing debate at Eurogroup level,
I will argue that it is paramount we continue our progress towards
completing the banking union. I will also highlight the areas in which,
in my view, we should achieve progress as a matter of urgency, in order
to support the necessary efforts banks are making to refocus their
business model on a Europe-wide basis.
The banking union: temple or tree?
Since
November 2014 European banking supervision has been responsible for the
prudential supervision of the banking sector in the euro area and,
since October 2020, in two more Member States – Croatia and Bulgaria –
that entered into close cooperation agreements.
I would argue
that the first pillar of the banking union has managed to deliver
high-quality prudential supervision of the banking sector within our
remit, which is actually the biggest in the world by asset size.
Still, it is fair to say that since the inception of the banking union
there has been no noticeable improvement in the level of integration of
the banking sector in the area we supervise. We all know that the legal
framework applicable to European banking supervision has some
shortcomings. For example, despite being a European institution, the ECB
often needs to apply national legislation in the supervision of
cross-border banking groups as it is not fully harmonised with directly
applicable European law.
But while this has an undeniable adverse effect on the cross-border
integration of EU banks, as I discussed last year in Ljubljana,
I do believe that European banking supervision has led to a truly
unified exercise of supervisory responsibilities. If we ultimately want
to identify the root causes of the lack of progress in the integration
of the euro area retail banking sector, we need to look at the lessons
learnt from the past and consider broader, more fundamental questions of
institutional design in the European Union.
To illustrate this point, it is worth going back to the debate at the intergovernmental conferences that led to the Maastricht Treaty being signed and the European Union being established.
Back
then, in 1991, there were two competing schools of thought regarding
the new European institutional framework, in particular in the work of
the Intergovernmental Conference on Political Union.
On
one side were those who argued that the new union should resemble a
Greek temple – an edifice with separate, or parallel, pillars. The
Community method would apply only to the first pillar, the old European
Economic Community including the single market and the newly established
Economic and Monetary Union, while the second and third pillars on
foreign and security policy and justice and home affairs would instead
be run through intergovernmental arrangements.
This
was broadly the proposal for Treaty amendments presented by the
Luxembourgish presidency in the first half of 1991, which was opposed by
the Commission, the Parliament and some more integrationist Member
States. Then, during the second half of 1991, the Dutch presidency tried
to revive a Commission proposal where the Union structure would be more
similar to a tree – with a single trunk but different branches for
different policies.
While approval processes and voting majorities might well vary across
the various branches, the fundamental tenets of the Community method –
political and legislative initiative from the Commission, enhanced role
of the Parliament and the jurisdiction of the Court of Justice – would
apply to all the different policies. In this way the essential
supranational, some would probably say federal, elements of the European
architecture would be preserved.
In the end, the Greek temple
structure won the day. And although some historians and political
scientists may disagree, I would argue that institutional progress in
the European Union has proceeded along those lines ever since. Whenever
some specific institutional reforms risk crossing a critical political
line in terms of depth and breadth of European integration, the
intergovernmental elements of the new structure would become more
prominent, enabling the Member States to retain control of the process...
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