ECB's Lautenschläger: Four years of Banking Union: where do we stand?

13 November 2018

Sabine Lautenschläger, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB and Vice-Chair of the Supervisory Board of the ECB, reflects on the state of the banking union and the Single Supervisory Mechanism, or SSM.

Four years ago, at the start of this ambitious project, scepticism was rife. Despite the general consensus that European supervision and a banking union were necessary complements to a monetary union, many questioned whether this was a realistic goal.

Tough and fair European supervision, backed by tougher regulation, has contributed to making european banking sector significantly safer and sounder. Mrs Lautenschläger highlights just two of many relevant issues:

Still banks must continue to improve in several areas. And now is a good point to stress that financial stability is also good for the banks themselves. For a start, many banks should take advantage of the good times to continue cleaning up their balance sheets and adapt their business models to face upcoming challenges – the current economic environment is as good as it gets!

All banks also need to further strengthen their risk management frameworks, IT systems and internal capital and liquidity management.

But not only banks still have work to do. In this vein, she mentions several relevant points:

Full speech


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