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Graham Bishop is a member of the European Commission’s Expert Group (press release) studying the joint issuance of debt in the form of a redemption fund and Eurobills. Graham has worked for more than two years to develop a plan for a Temporary Eurobill Fund (TEF)[1]. The Expert Group's wide-ranging Mandate is here.
The Temporary Eurobill Fund is carefully structured to avoid opening its members to the virtually unlimited liability of guaranteeing all the debts of other members – as would happen in a mutualised pool of debt with 'joint & several' guarantees. The guarantees would be 'pro rata' – as with the existing ECB/ESM structures. It is not a 'silver bullet’ solution but a relatively modest, though reversible, step towards deepening trust and solidarity amongst euro area states.
The over-arching objectives of the TEF are to restore confidence within the euro area economy by promoting the return of the `Single Market’ in banking and finance. Nonetheless, it recognises the political reality: further integration must be in the form of modest, incremental and reversible steps that are easily demonstrated to benefit citizens.
The financial objectives include: (i) Eliminate risk of a euro government liquidity crisis (by eliminating `roll-over’ risk for euro area government bonds): (ii) Create the safest, most liquid euro area financial asset for banks, business and citizens – enhancing the `single market’ in finance: (iii) Reduce the `doom loop’ between banks/states to improve monetary policy transmission and thus ease the effective monetary tightness for SMEs/citizens in several states: (iv) Reduce the burden on the ECB - ending the need for OMT and ELS. Finally (v) it would give a small reduction in the interest burden for some states.
More general political objectives include: Deepening trust between euro area states as the TEF gives an incentive to comply with CSR/SGP requirements and permits observations of CSR compliance over an economic cycle before any decision is needed on renewing the Fund. It provides further assistance to states exiting a Programme and it minimises `moral hazard’. The TEF provides the possibility of a modest `fiscal capacity’ and creates the basis for a European Treasury. Ahead of the European Parliament elections next May, a decision to enact the TEF would demonstrate that `Europe’ still has the political ability and will to take significant economic decisions. Such a decision would be a further, small step along the road to integration – while remaining reversible at any time. Immediate reversibility is the key to minimising moral hazard.
Basic Features of the TEF:
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[1] Click here for detailed TEF paper, as at Feb 2013