ECB Financial Stability Review June 2012

12 June 2012

According to the Review, developments in recent weeks have continued to illustrate the persistent negative interplay of key risks, and underscore the need for concerted and comprehensive decisions of Member States to put an end to the turbulence that has been affecting the euro area for over two years.

The overall outlook for financial stability has remained very challenging in the euro area. Significant financial market turmoil experienced late last year gave way to some respite in the early months of 2012 following resolute Eurosystem measures, against the background of cumulative political action geared towards a comprehensive strategy to address the causes of the euro area crisis. This relative calm, however, has proven to be fragile and renewed pressures have again emerged since April. Remaining vulnerabilities in the financial stability outlook demonstrate that there is no room for complacency in implementing needed adjustment, either on the part of governments or on that of banks. In particular, Member States should step up their initiatives to strengthen the fiscal and banking components of a robust monetary union.

The Financial Stability Review (FSR) June 2012 identifies three key risks to euro area financial stability:

There remains a clear need for a continued focus on tackling the root causes of the crisis, and a comprehensive response remains key to decisively ending a spiral of systemic risk augmentation. Concretely, a proactive rigorous policy implementation is needed in five areas:

While these five areas provide the necessary critical foundations upon which a sustainable monetary union must be based, there is now a need to go beyond these areas and conceive a banking union as an integral counterpart of Monetary Union. Such an endeavour would clearly take time to implement and could require legal changes. But once in place, three critical objectives could be achieved:

Full Review


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