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Véron, Nicolas
20 April 2010

Nicolas Véron: The challenge of Europe’s effort at financial redesign


The existence of an EU level of financial supervision is a necessary, though not sufficient, condition for sustainable market integration, Véron argues. He also shows the practical challenges that the new ESA’s could encounter with respect to power-sharing and governance.

Even  as  it  struggles  to  deal  with  Greece’s  problems,  the  European  Union  is  undertaking  another  vital  effort  –  overhauling  its  framework  for  financial  regulation,  including  establishment  of  the  first  EUlevel  financial  supervisory  authorities.  The  outcome  of  the  European  legislative  process  is  uncertain,  but  it  will  have  a  decisive  impact  on  the  shape  of  Europe’s  financial  system.   
The  legislation  under  consideration  by  the  European  Parliament  would  create  three  new  EU  agencies  to  oversee  banks,  insurers,  and  securities  and  markets  respectively.  Unlike  the  committees  they  would  replace,  these  agencies  would  have  a  formal  decisionmaking  process  and  binding  powers  on  individual  cases,  making  them  in  effect  the  world’s  first  supranational  financial  supervisors.  In  addition,  a  European  Systemic  Risk  Board,  mostly  coordinated  by  the  European  Central  Bank,  would  monitor  major  financial  risks  and  issue  recommendations  to  address  them.   
These  proposals,  based  on  a  February  2009  report  by  a  task  force  led  by  French  former  central  banker  Jacques  de  Larosière  at  the  request  of  theEuropean  Commission’s  president,  received  unanimous  political  backing  at  a  summit  of  EU  leaders  in  June  last  year.  Their  backing  was  truly  remarkable,  given  the  intensity  with  which  some  member  states  –  most  conspicuously  the  United  Kingdom,  but  also  Germany,  Spain  and  others  –  had  resisted  similar  attempts  in  previous  years.   
The  importance  of  a  breakthrough  in  this  area  cannot  be  overestimated.  The  EU  aims  to  build  a  single  financial  market,  but  finance  cannot  develop  without  effective  supervision.  Entrusting  the  task  to  27  different  national  authorities,  with  a  track  record  of  protecting  local  players  or  attempting  to  control  them,  creates  constant  pressure  towards  fragmentation.  The  existence  of  an  EU  level  of  financial  supervision  is  a  necessary,  though  not  sufficient,  condition  for  sustainable  market  integration.   
Unsurprisingly,  the  proposed  design  is  a  compromise,  and  is  vulnerable  to  legitimate  criticism.  Under  the  current  version,  adopted  by  member  states  last  December,  the  new  authorities’  powers  are  limited.  Their  rulemaking  would  be  subject  to  approval  by  the  European  Commission.  The  proposed  governance  is  problematic,  consisting  of  supervisory  boards  in  which  the  fulltime  chair  has  no  vote,  all  but  guaranteeing  that  only  parochial  national  standpoints  are  represented.  A  clause  that  their  decisions  should  not  have  fiscal  impact  on  member  states  is  seen  by  some  as  a  portent  of  future  paralysis.  The  division  between  banking,  insurance  and  securities  into  separate  authorities  arguably  overlooks  the  strong  interdependencies  among  these  segments.   
Much  of  the  discussion  is  now  about  the  powers  granted  to  the  new  authorities.  In  the  current  version,  they  would  mostly  act  as  arbiters  between  national  watchdogs  in  case  of  disagreement,  depending  on  the  circumstances.  The  only  players  unambiguously  subjected  to  EUlevel  supervision  would  be  credit  rating  agencies,  a  small  if  important  category.  Some  European  parliamentarians  understandably  want  to  extend  the  authorities’  mandate  ‐‐ for  example,  by  making  the  European  banking  authority  directly  supervise  panEuropean  banks.   
But  at  least  equally  important  is  how  good  their  decisionmaking  will  be.  The  current  measures,  though  crucial,  are  not  the  end  of  the  game:  if  the  new  bodies  start  with  limited  responsibilities  but  carry  them  out  effectively  and  competently,  they  will  gain  trust  and  support  from  most  stakeholders.  Only  from  such  a  basis  could  they  be  granted,  over  time,  the  more  sweeping  powers  needed  to  ensure  the  sustainability  of  an  integrated  EU  financial  system.  Trying  to  achieve  such  a  goal  in  one  move  is  not  politically  realistic,  and  not  sufficiently  cognizant  of  the  crucial  role  of  such  confidencebuilding.   
From  this  perspective,  the  focus  of  the  parliamentarians  should  be  on  improving  the  authorities’  hastily  designed  governance,  possibly  by  expanding  their  boards  to  individuals  who  would  represent  a  Europeanwide  interest  as  opposed  to  national  views,  as  at  the  European  Central  Bank,  and  perhaps  by  pooling  national  representatives  into  multicountry  constituencies  to  reduce  the  boards’  size,  as  at  the  International  Monetary  Fund.  Locating  all  three  agencies  in  the  same  city,  as  European  parliamentarians  have  suggested,  would  also  lead  to  better  performance.   
The  timetable  could  determine  the  outcome.  Assuming  the  Conservatives  win  the  UK  election  in  May,  this  issue  will  be  their  first  major  European  discussion.  Their  Euroskeptic  base  is  unsympathetic  to  delegating  responsibility  to  the  EU  in  an  area  as  important  to  the  UK  economy  as  financial  serices.  If  the  discussion  is  only  about  the  new  agencies’  powers,  the  European  Parliament  and  the  future  British  government  may  find  themselves  on  a  collision  course.  If  it  is  about  governance  and  effectiveness,  a  common  ground  may  be  found.   
The  stakes  are  high.  If  the  attempt  to  create  a  more  integrated  supervisory  framework  founders,  markets  could  lose  faith  in  the  prospects  of  panEuropean  banks,  and  encourage  them  to  retreat  to  their  original  home  market.  Such  a  result  could  pose  a  bigger  potential  setback  for  European  economic  integration  than  anything  that  has  happened  in  the  cisis  so  far.  The  EU  cannot  afford  failure  in  this  reform.   But  at  least  equally  important  is  how  good  their  decisionmaking  will  be.  The  current  measures,  though  crucial,  are  not  the  end  of  the  game:  if  the  new  bodies  start  with  limited  responsibilities  but  carry  them  out  effectively  and  competently,  they  will  gain  trust  and  support  from  most  stakeholders.  Only  from  such  a  basis  could  they  be  granted,  over  time,  the  more  sweeping  powers  needed  to  ensure  the  sustainability  of  an  integrated  EU  financial  system.  Trying  to  achieve  such  a  goal  in  one  move  is  not  politically  realistic,  and  not  sufficiently  cognizant  of  the  crucial  role  of  such  confidencebuilding.   
From  this  perspective,  the  focus  of  the  parliamentarians  should  be  on  improving  the  authorities’  hastily  designed  governance,  possibly  by  expanding  their  boards  to  individuals  who  would  represent  a  Europeanwide  interest  as  opposed  to  national  views,  as  at  the  European  Central  Bank,  and  perhaps  by  pooling  national  representatives  into  multicountry  constituencies  to  reduce  the  boards’  size,  as  at  the  International  Monetary  Fund.  Locating  all  three  agencies  in  the  same  city,  as  European  parliamentarians  have  suggested,  would  also  lead  to  better  performance.   
The  timetable  could  determine  the  outcome.  Assuming  the  Conservatives  win  the  UK  election  in  May,  this  issue  will  be  their  first  major  European  discussion.  Their  Euroskeptic  base  is  unsympathetic  to  delegating  responsibility  to  the  EU  in  an  area  as  important  to  the  UK  economy  as  financial  serices.  If  the  discussion  is  only  about  the  new  agencies’  powers,  the  European  Parliament  and  the  future  British  government  may  find  themselves  on  a  collision  course.  If  it  is  about  governance  and  effectiveness,  a  common  ground  may  be  found.   
The  stakes  are  high.  If  the  attempt  to  create  a  more  integrated  supervisory  framework  founders,  markets  could  lose  faith  in  the  prospects  of  panEuropean  banks,  and  encourage  them  to  retreat  to  their  original  home  market.  Such  a  result  could  pose  a  bigger  potential  setback  for  European  economic  integration  than  anything  that  has  happened  in  the  cisis  so  far.  The EU  cannot  afford  failure  in  this  reform.   
 
Nicolas  Véron  is  a  Senior  Fellow  at  Bruegel  in  Brussels,  and  a  Visiting  Fellow  at  the  Peterson  Institute  for  International  Economics  in  Washington.   
 


© Nicolas Véron


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