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18 September 2012

UK Government publishes consultation on macro-prudential tools for the Financial Policy Committee


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A consultation on what tools the new Financial Policy Committee should have in order to help ensure future financial stability was launched by Financial Secretary to the Treasury, Greg Clark. Responses are requested by 11 December, 2012.


The consultation, entitled The Financial Services Bill: the Financial Policy Committee’s macro-prudential tools, sets out the proposed tools that it will be able to use to address systemic risks to the UK financial system.  These include:

  • control over the level of the UK’s counter-cyclical capital buffer;
  • a direction-making power to impose sectoral capital requirements; and
  • once international standards are in place, the power to set, and vary over time, a leverage ratio cap.

Financial Secretary to the Treasury, Greg Clark said:

“This Government is committed to reforming the failed system of financial regulation.

“In establishing the Financial Policy Committee, the Government is creating a strong, macro-prudential authority that will identify and address potential risks to stability in the financial system.  But to be effective it must have the appropriate tools.

“Today we are consulting on our proposals for what those tools should be.”

The creation of the Financial Policy Committee as a strong, macro-prudential authority within the Bank of England is a key element of the Government’s reforms to the UK’s system of financial regulation, which will be enacted by the Financial Services Bill.

Even when firms are considered stable on an individual basis, the aggregate behaviour of firms can seriously damage the stability of the financial system. It will be the responsibility of the Committee to oversee the system as a whole, identify potential risks to its stability and take concerted action to address them.

In order to address systemic risks to the UK financial system, it will have broad powers of recommendation and a power to issue directions to the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) and Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), using macro-prudential tools set out by the Treasury in secondary legislation.

The consultation being launched today is based on the recommendations made to the Government by the interim Financial Policy Committee.

Press release

Consultation



© HM Treasury


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