VoxEU: Completing the Eurozone banking union - What must be done

04 May 2016

To resolve the problems of current proposals, authors argue that legislators should stop discussing debt restructuring and instead enhance the borrowing capacity of the European Stability Mechanism.

Although the Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive rules and the reduction of the over-exposure to domestic public debt are necessary, their implementation in the absence of some complementary measures would require too much time and effort. Along the transition, banking activity could experience serious troubles possibly jeopardising the final full recovery of the Italian economy. The very recent institution of the government-sponsored Atlante Fund, a privately managed investment vehicle that should buy non-performing loans and capital of troubled financial institutions, exemplifies these risks. In fact, its main shareholders, the largest Italian banks and insurance companies together with the state sovereign fund, stated that they plan to invest in shares and assets they believe are ‘under-valued’ by other investors and European institutions. The risk is that the fund exacerbates the exposure to domestic risks of financial institutions without addressing their under-capitalisation.

Below is a list of complementary measures that could speed up, or save, the of the banking union.

Eurozone countries with more solid banks could oppose these two tools, arguing that taxpayers’ money would be used to subside banks in the Eurozone periphery. However, the alternative is a continuing instability of the monetary union, whose dissolution would be very costly for all member countries. Since the idea of a EU recapitalisation fund is novel, we spend the remaining part of this column justifying its proposal, and refer to Pisany-Ferry (2016) and other commentaries in Baldwin and Giavazzi (2016) for convincing arguments in favour of enhancing the borrowing capacity of the European Stability Mechanism.

Full article on VoxEU


© VoxEU.org