Finance Watch: Basel III finalisation comes undone: A proposal that lets down citizens and backtracks on global agreements

28 March 2022

Finance Watch regrets that the so-called “draft Banking Package 2021” (finalising the implementation of the Basel III prudential framework for banks in Europe) leaves European banks insufficiently capitalised, and taxpayers exposed.

 This article sums up Finance Watch’s detailed analysis of the package

Overview

The global regulatory framework agreed by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision in December 2017 (Basel III), was created to address the insufficient capitalisation and inadequate risk controls of the banking sector that led to the financial crisis of 2008/09. The Commission’s legislative proposal, also known as the ‚Banking Package 2021‘, aims to complete the post-crisis reforms and to ‘faithfully implement the outstanding elements of the Basel III reform in the EU, while taking into account EU specificities and avoiding significant increases in capital requirements’.[1]

Contents of the legislative proposal

The Commission’s legislative proposal comprises:

Regulatory objectives

The final instalment of the Basel III standards, agreed and published for the most part in December 2017[7], aims at (i) completing the post crisis reform of the prudential framework for banks at the global level; and (ii) correcting flaws that have become apparent since the first Basel III standards came into force in 2014.[8] In particular, the finalisation of Basel III comprises measures to

The Banking Package is intended to complete the implementation of the Basel III framework into EU law. The Commission’s explanatory notes set out four main objectives:

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