ECA: Audit gaps in EU banking supervision must be closed

14 November 2018

In view of efforts at EU level to complete the Banking Union, the heads of the 29 SAIs of the EU and its Member States have called on governments and parliaments to address deficiencies in the accountability and audit arrangements for EU banking supervision.

The establishment of the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) in November 2014 entailed a fundamental change in the architecture of EU banking supervision. Almost 130 ‘significant’ banks came under the direct supervision of the ECB. These banks represent a total asset value of € 21 trillion, or 80 % of the total asset value of banks in the euro area. Several thousand ‘less-significant’ (i.e. medium-sized and small) banks remain under direct national supervision, albeit under the ECB’s responsibility.

Since the SSM was introduced, those SAIs of euro-area countries that have a mandate to audit the supervision of banks have no longer been able to perform this role for ‘significant’ banks. At the same time, the mandate of the ECA does not explicitly include the right to audit the ECB’s supervisory mechanism for ‘significant’ banks.

EU and Member State auditors said: “We are witnessing the paradoxical situation that the audit competencies regarding banking supervision are now overall more limited than prior to the introduction of the Single Supervisory Mechanism in 2014”.

Full press release


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