Banking Union: Commission proposes reform of bank crisis management and deposit insurance framework

19 April 2023

However, experience has shown that many failing medium-sized and smaller banks have been managed with solutions outside the resolution framework. This sometimes involved using taxpayers' money instead of the bank's required internal resources or private, industry-funded safety nets..

The European Commission has today adopted a proposal to adjust and further strengthen the EU's existing bank crisis management and deposit insurance (CMDI) framework, with a focus on medium-sized and smaller banks.

The EU's banking sector, which includes a strong crisis management framework, has become much more resilient in recent years. Financial institutions in the EU are well capitalised, highly liquid and closely supervised.

However, experience has shown that many failing medium-sized and smaller banks have been managed with solutions outside the resolution framework. This sometimes involved using taxpayers' money instead of the bank's required internal resources or private, industry-funded safety nets (deposit guarantee schemes and resolution funds).

Today's proposal will enable authorities to organise the orderly market exit for a failing bank of any size and business model, with a broad range of tools. In particular, it will facilitate the use of industry-funded safety nets to shield depositors in banking crises, such as by transferring them from an ailing bank to a healthy one. Such use of safety nets must only be a complement to the banks' internal loss absorption capacity, which remains the first line of defence.

Overall, this will further preserve financial stability, protect taxpayers and depositors, and support the real economy and its competitiveness.

The proposal has the following objectives:

  1. Preserving financial stability and protecting taxpayers' money
  1. Shielding the real economy from the impact of bank failure
  1. Better protection for depositors

Next steps

The legislative package will now be discussed by the European Parliament and Council.

Commission


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