Whelan's new paper, "TARGET2 and Central Bank Balance Sheets", focuses in particular on how TARGET2 impacts the balance sheets of the central banks that participate in the system.
      
    
    
      
	Abstract
	The Eurosystem’s TARGET2  payments system has featured heavily in academic and popular discussions in recent years. Much of this commentary had described the system as being responsible for a “secret bailout” of Europe’s periphery which has led to huge credit risks for the Bundesbank should the euro break up. This paper discusses the TARGET2  system, focusing in particular on how it impacts the balance sheets of the central banks that participate in the system. It concludes that the TARGET2  is largely innocent of the charges that have been levelled against it.
	Arguments that TARGET2  facilitated a bailout of the periphery or that the system is playing a key role in facilitating peripheral current account deficits turn out to be wide of the mark. Risks to Germany due to the loss of TARGET2-related revenues for the Bundesbank after a euro breakup turn out to be relatively small because these revenues are limited and because there are potentially large gains from new seigniorage revenues in this scenario. Many criticisms involving TARGET2  turn out, on closer examination, to be criticisms of the ECB’s core principle of treating credit institutions across the euro area in an equal manner. Proposals that the ECB  adopt procedures that discriminate between banks in different countries (or that restrict the operation of payments systems in certain countries) are likely to be incompatible with the continuation of the euro as a common currency.
	Full paper
      
      
      
      
        © Karl Whelan
     
      
      
      
      
      
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