Banking industry invites EBA, ESCB and SRB to move swiftly towards a common data dictionary - the key cornerstone underpinning a much-needed integrated and standardized framework for data reporting that can contribute to better supervision and support financial stability.
The European Banking Federation is
calling on all financial sector authorities in the European Union to
support the creation of a single EU data dictionary. Such dictionary is
to be
The European banking industry, through the EBF, fully supports the
creation of a single EU data reporting dictionary as the basis of an
integrated and standardised EU framework. Data requests to banks by EU
and national authorities have increased significantly in recent
years. Banks provide the data that is requested but the lack of
harmonized governance adds to unwanted complexity and holds back
efficiency.
“A single dictionary is the keystone of the integrated reporting project,” says Wim Mijs, Chief Executive Officer of the EBF. “It
is about improving efficiency and consistency, about avoiding
duplication, and about avoiding unnecessary complexity. Delivering this
single dictionary requires a pragmatic approach and close cooperation
between all financial supervisors and our industry. The banking industry
needs to be part of the design and development of the data dictionary;
only then we can turn this vision into reality. As banking sector we are
keen to make this happen.”
Recent comments by Jose Manuel Campa, Chair of the European Banking
Authority (EBA) on the creation of a single data reporting dictionary
are encouraging. In an interview with Börsen-Zeitung Mr Campa said “There
is a fair enough consensus that having a dictionary is one of the
goals. That is likely to be one of our key proposals in the feasibility
study. It makes a lot of sense and I certainly hope that there will be
an agreement on that.”
EBA is currently conducting a feasibility study on integrated
reporting in the context of Article 430c of the Capital Requirements
Regulation. A draft report of this study is expected in the first
quarter of this year. The EBF hopes that the results of the EBA study
will support its four principles defined in its vision for integrated
data reporting: define once, report once, share information and enhance
governance.
Europe’s central banks already have expressed their support for this
approach. The European System of Central Banks (ESCB) in September
published its report[1]
as input to the EBA feasibility study. The ESCB report proposed a
number of measures to make bank reporting more efficient, recognizing
concerns from both lawmakers and the banking industry.
In order to move rapidly towards the goal, the EBF invites all
relevant authorities to leverage on the Banks’ Integrated Reporting
Dictionary project, known as BIRD. This BIRD project already involves
the European System of Central Banks and the banking industry in the
design of a single regulatory dictionary. The federation encourages the
EBA and the Single Resolution Board (SRB) to join forces in completing
the project and to start designing a new reporting requests governance
for which the single regulatory dictionary is the cornerstone.
For more information:
Francisco Saravia, Senior Policy Advisor, European Banking Federation, +32 2 508 3711, f.saravia@ebf.eu
About the European Banking Federation:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking
sector, bringing together national banking associations from across
Europe. The federation is committed to a thriving European economy that
is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem,
and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the
dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere. Website: www.ebf.eu
© EBF
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