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June and July saw an intense round of discussions, reports, hearings and speeches on Financial Regulation. In part, this activity was sparked by the Enron debacle but that happened to come at a convenient moment for European policymakers to consider the implications for the supervision of Europe’s financial system in the context of the far-reaching constitutional debate thrown up by the Convention.
There does not appear to be any strong drive to change the existing approach. The Working Group on Economic Governance suggests that it will not propose any revolutionary changes to the distribution of powers. In particular the ECB is not likely to gain any power beyond its existing monetary powers, nor will the Eurogroup be formalised with the result that pressure to move towards central financial regulation will not appear.
In the Longer Term a constitutional document from the Convention will inevitably draw closer together responses to new economic and financial developments. The mechanics for this co-ordination are largely in place already - The Broad Economic Guidelines and the Stability Pact.
Growth of financial markets seems inevitable and will be achieved with a similar set of rules via the application of a “Lamfalussy process” to all financial sectors. In, perhaps, a decade, the then-existing legal structure may be similar enough in all Member States to enable a single European policy response to some presently unforeseeable financial disaster.
This, therefore, just leaves the problem of dealing with the unforeseeable crises of the future. Logic suggests that risk will have to be left to the policy-makers of the day!
Contents
Executive Summary
Introduction: What is the Convention about?
Part I: Aspects Relevant to EMU and, implicitly, to Financial Regulation
The Working Parties of the Convention
Part II: The June/July Debate on Financial Regulation
June 27- Draft Report by Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee (EMAC)
July 10 – Hearings by EMAC on Post-Enron issues
July 11 – Speech by Commissioner Bolkestein
July 12 – ECOFIN
July 19 - European Commission President Romano Prodi appoints a High-Level Study Group
July 23 – High-level exchange of views
Part III: The Implications of the Convention for Financial Regulation: an
Assessment
The Near Term
But in the Longer Term
Figures
MANDATE OF THE CONVENTIONS WORKING PARTY
THE LAMFALUSSY-PROPOSAL IN THE CONTEXT OF BROADER
CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES
THE LAMFALUSSY-PROCESS: WHAT IT IS AND COULD IT SPREAD?
CONVENTION WORKING PARTY – CONCLUSION
ENRON HEARING IN PARLIAMENT
SPEECH BY COMMISSIONER BOLKESTEIN
RESULTS OF COUNCIL OF ECONOMICS AND FINANCE MINISTERS
PRODI APPOINTS HIGH-LEVEL STUDY GROUP
RESULTS OF HIGH-LEVEL EXCHANGE OF VIEWS ON FINANCIAL MARKETS