Speech by SRB Chair Elke König to the ECON Committee (European Parliament)

23 March 2021

"I want to address some of the current discussions around enhancements of the wider crisis management framework as well as aspects of completing the Banking Union."

Today my speech will be split into two parts:

Firstly, I’d like to cover some of the main items since I last came before this committee in October; mainly the progress in resolution planning and developments regarding the SRF. Of course, the impact of Covid-19 on the wider economy and banking sector is on all of our minds, but, given the time I have, this will not be the main focus of my intervention this morning. I will of course be delighted to take your questions on this on this and any other topic.

Secondly, I want to address some of the current discussions around enhancements of the wider crisis management framework as well as aspects of completing the Banking Union.

[1. A round up since the last ECON appearance]

It is almost five months since I addressed you last, so I’d like to give a brief overview on the main points of our work since then.

Our multi-year work plan also accounts for the findings and recommendations that the European Court of Auditors highlighted in its recent report – some were already addressed last year since the cut-off of the audit. Overall, I am pleased that ECA noted good progress in bank resolution in the SRM. This said, our efforts achieving resolvability will continue. This is crucial for protecting taxpayers’ money and promoting financial stability.

 

[2. Completing the Banking Union/CDMI review]

The Banking Union is still a house “under construction”, unfortunately. I am glad to see that there is currently momentum building up to address many of the aspects of the Banking Union – from how to deal with mid-sized banks to the home/host issues  to the long-running debate over a European deposit insurance scheme.

The European Commission recently triggered a review of the Crisis Management and Deposit Insurance framework, including a public consultation. This welcome review will bring together much of the ongoing discussions.

Let me be clear – we need to finalise the Banking Union and in particular its third pillar. From our perspective as European resolution authority, we are not talking about a revolution of the system. We have a framework in place that evidently works. However, we must aim for an evolution of the framework.

Against this background, targeted amendments that draw conclusions from the past five years of recovery and resolution planning experience would certainly be an improvement. The key policy objective should be that any changes facilitate the resolution or liquidation process for all types of banks, regardless of their funding models and foster the Banking Union, i.e. strengthen the European approach. We should resist the temptation of re-nationalising crisis management practices that could result in fragmentation.

A core piece will be the establishment of the European Deposit Insurance System; the third pillar of our Banking Union. EDIS enhances the level of depositor protection and should meaningfully complement the crisis management framework, particularly if it contained some alternative measures allowing, for example, the support for transfer strategies, such as a sale of business. If we want to increase the efficiency and coherence of the wider framework for bank failure, we should stay ambitious, advance with EDIS in the context of current reform/CMDI discussions, and complete the Banking Union.

Let me briefly address three other important points where progress would be welcome:

[Conclusion]

Honourable members, we have made good progress since the last crisis, but there is still more to do. Our challenge now is to make sure we do not let our guard down as we try to emerge from the pandemic safely and in an economically sound way. I am sure, together with this house and this committee in particular, we will emerge even stronger in the post-pandemic era.

SRB


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