Czech National Bank Governor Hampl: Should non-euro area countries welcome the banking union?

05 April 2013

Hampl focused in his remarks on non-euro area countries' attitude to the SSM, as the SSM is the key part of banking union and is "almost" finalised.

Hampl started with a statement that the so-called BU is currently only an emerging concept. BU is very far from the final version and it is difficult to guess what the final outcome might be. Nevertheless, what will be at the end will be critical for the position of non-euro area countries.

So, what is it all about? The proposed BU is based on four/five pillars, or “legs”:

Problems emerge immediately, because each pillar is at a different stage of negotiation and approval, involves different rules of approval and, more importantly, so far each applies to a different group of countries:

The resolution rules and the single DGS are where the political clashes will inevitably happen. There are two reasons for that:

The CNB’s position was: let’s discuss the whole thing (BU) in one shot as a one compact and coherent package where the balance between powers, duties, responsibilities and money always remains assured. And negotiate everything as a single animal, so that illogical inconsistencies are not being produced all along. Sure, that would take much more time, but the final outcome might look better and we would not build up the house from the roof down.

Full speech


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