IRSG Narrative - EU Strategic Autonomy
01 August 2022
With this narrative we wish to make the following observations: Following the pandemic, and in the context of an uncertain geopolitical environment, we fully understand the rationale to consider the resilience and self-sufficiency of the EU economy. We also recognise that the UK departure from the EU creates a new context in which both the EU and UK will develop their own financial regulatory policy that is tailored to each jurisdiction’s specific needs.
- However, we are strong advocates of the benefits of open and
integrated markets not least for EU and UK corporates, savers and
investors, but also as regards the role of international finance to
support the pandemic recovery and the twin transitions (climate and
digital).
- The industry in the UK remains open to further our reciprocal
sharing of expertise and knowledge on the matter. There are numerous
instances in which learning from mutual experiences have proven to be
advantageous.
- Cross-border risks to financial stability and investor protection
need to be managed and controlled, but this should, and can, be done in
such a way as to safeguard the economic benefits of integrated markets.
- We recognise that the pursuit of unilateral interests can undermine
effective multilateral cooperation. To ensure investor and consumer
protection amongst others, supervisory cooperation is a key element that
can safeguard both sides and in so doing limit concerns about spillover
effects from crisis situations.
- Recommendation 1 of the European Commission’s Communication on
strategic autonomy places its emphasis on the completion of the Capital
Market and Banking Union initiatives. The IRSG continues to support
these endeavours, which constitute the best approach to bolstering
internal market competitiveness.
- A CMU that is open and accessible to foreign risk management,
capital and global liquidity will be better suited to delivering on the
EU’s policy objectives. If fully developed in the EU and open to
(equivalent, highly regulated) third countries, it would support jobs
and growth. An open approach, ensuring that Europe maintains its access
to pools of global liquidity and financing, would go a long way towards
realising the ambition of building thriving EU capital markets. This is
entirely compatible with the EU increasing its competitiveness.
- We support an end-state balance in which risks associated with
interdependence are managed by strong risk management tools, cooperation
and supervision, but where we avoid any decoupling of EU firms that
would interrupt real economy financing and challenge long-standing and
effective global norms associated with: outsourcing, consolidated risk
management, portfolio management, data sharing, cross-border lending,
trading and clearing.
- If at a simple level strategic autonomy is about ensuring the EU has
the financial and capital markets necessary to drive its economy and
twin transitions, then central to success will be ensuring resilience
and that it benefits from openness and access to global markets.
full paper
IRSG
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