The Commission gives detailed answers to 34 questions on the framework for bank recovery and resolution, which it says is crucial for ensuring long-term financial stability and for reducing the potential public cost of possible future financial crises.
The Commission provides answers to the following questions:
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Why is the Commission proposing a framework for bank recovery and resolution?
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Why is this framework needed?
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What is the relationship between today's proposal and the Commission's announcement of 30 May 2012 on moving towards a banking union?
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Why are normal insolvency proceedings unsuitable for banks?
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Why didn't the EU have this framework in place before the crisis? Why is action at EU level needed?
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How does the draft proposal relate to work undertaken at international level?
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Is the EU the first jurisdiction that is proposing a crisis management framework for the banking sector? What are other countries doing on crisis management?
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What are the main differences between what the EU is proposing and the US approach?
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What are the key elements of today's proposal?
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What will the role of the European Banking Authority (EBA) be?
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What are the objectives of resolution and the conditions to trigger it?
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What resolution tools will be needed?
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What kinds of financial institutions would be covered by the EU regime?
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How will the regime apply to the failure of a cross-border group?
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How would financial support within groups work?
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How will the cost of bank resolution be financed?
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What purpose should resolution funds serve?
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Should there be a single European resolution fund?
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What is the proposal to write down creditors ('bail-in') and how would it work?
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What instruments would bail-in apply to and in what order?
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Are you proposing to require institutions to maintain a minimum level of liabilities that is subject to write down?
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Would the bail-in tool apply immediately to all outstanding debt or only after a transitional period?
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How much would bail-in cost banks, and ultimately the real economy?
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How does the Commission propose to strengthen cross-border supervision and resolution in the future?
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What is the purpose of appointing a special manger and wouldn't this appointment lead to loss of confidence in and consequent runs on the firm in question?
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Resolution measures may interfere with the rights of shareholders and creditors. How does the Commission propose to deal with this?
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Would "living wills" help authorities to manage a cross-border banking crisis?
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How does the EU framework square with the resolution regime adopted in some Member States?
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How does the EU Framework square with the EU State Aid rules?
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How does this proposal relate to the Capital Requirements Directive IV (CRD IV) proposal tabled in summer 2011?
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What link is there between resolution and deposit guarantee schemes (DGS)?
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If we had had this proposal already in place, would this have saved banks like Dexia, Lehman Brothers, or BayernLB?
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Is there a link to the plan for the recapitalisation of banks?
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What is the link between this proposal and the work of the High-level Expert Group on structural aspects of the EU banking sector?
Full FAQ
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