Combined fiscal and monetary response kept financial fragmentation in check during pandemic; Resilient financial integration vital for euro area economy and financial sector; EU equity markets need further promotion to finance green and digital transformations
The financial fragmentation in the euro area that occurred at the
start of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic was reversed relatively
quickly, the European Central Bank (ECB)’s latest report on Financial Integration and Structure in the Euro Area
shows. Once pre-pandemic levels of integration were regained, financial
integration increased further and remained resilient to pressure from
further waves of infections. The most influential policy interventions
that initially kept fragmentation contained, and then brought
integration back to pre-pandemic levels, were the series of ECB monetary
policy measures and the European Union (EU) agreement on a sizeable
coronavirus recovery fund.
The biennial ECB Financial Integration
and Structure in the Euro Area report focuses on financial integration,
changes in financial structure and the process of financial development
and modernisation. It also discusses selected financial sector policies,
notably those related to the European banking union and capital markets
union. In this way, the report contributes to the debate on how
European Economic and Monetary Union can be deepened.
Thanks to
decisive policy responses, financing of euro area firms and households
held up during the pandemic, although this required a significant
increase in public debt. In addition to fiscal support and guarantees,
another factor that helped non-financial corporations to stabilise was a
rapid shift in their financing mix towards bank credit lines and
corporate debt issuance, which was also facilitated by monetary policy
measures. The rise in non-bank financial intermediation continued, with
especially strong growth in investment funds, most notably in equity
funds.
The coronavirus crisis substantially restricted private
consumption risk sharing across euro area countries, consequently
limiting one of the benefits of financial integration and development.
The major fiscal initiatives at the EU level, such as the
NextGenerationEU recovery programme and the three safety nets for
businesses, jobs and workers, were key to ensuring risk sharing among
member countries and compensating for hampered private financial
channels.
The NextGenerationEU programme provides a unique
historical opportunity to bring private risk capital markets in the euro
area and EU to levels similar to those in other major economies.
Enhanced private forces would have to join public ones to ensure
sufficient innovation and prepare the ground for financing the green,
digital and other technological transformations. The coronavirus
pandemic and recent geopolitical events have further underlined the need
to accelerate the EU’s green and digital “twin transition”.
Completing the banking union and making material progress with the capital markets union remain important.
Implementation
of the 2020 capital markets union action plan – in particular the
digital European Single Access Point and the reviews of EU public
listing rules and of fund and insurance regulations – could produce
tangible progress in the development and integration of European public
and private equity markets. This is because the plan’s implementation is
an important contribution to enabling the large technological
transformations that are needed. The path of making insolvency
frameworks more efficient and harmonised across member countries also
needs to be continued. Even more effort will be necessary to build a
vibrant EU equity ecosystem – for example, to facilitate the scale-up
phase of successful companies.
Debt issuance procedures also need
to be further integrated and harmonised to reduce costs and allow
investors to better diversify across EU countries. As domestic and
cross-border bank consolidation could help address structurally low
profitability and fragmentation in retail credit markets, removing
remaining regulatory obstacles should be considered.
A statistical (online) annex has been released alongside this report. Since March 2020, the ECB has released, on a biannual basis, a streamlined set of indicators covering both financial integration and financial structure.
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