Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Europeans clash over bank flops

- BIRGIT JENNEN

FRANKFURT, Germany — Europe’s two biggest economies clashed Friday over awarding the power to close failing banks, with Germany saying the onus must be on national government­s and France opting to give the final say to the European Commission.

The disagreeme­nt broke into the open for the first time during a conference in Berlin at which German Deputy Finance Minister Thomas Steffen and French Treasury chief Ramon Fernandez outlined their opposing stances.

The proposed resolution authority and European Central Bank oversight of euro-area lenders form the core of a banking union that is intended to sever the link between bank and sovereign debt. While European policymake­rs agree on the need for a banking union

after the crisis that began in Greece four years ago, they are divided on the means of achieving it. Finance ministers are to deliberate the matter next week.

The “basic decision” on closing a failing bank would be taken by the board of national authoritie­s, though the formal decision should be taken “not by the commission but the council” of the European Union, Steffen said, citing a “conflict of interest” with the commission.

Fernandez said that the decision on resolution can either be legally invested with the European Union commission or with the council, which represents member states’ government­s. “We think it would be more rational to be the commission,” he said.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government has led opposition to a proposal from Michel Barnier, the European Union’s financial-services chief, for a single-resolution mechanism to handle euro-area bank failures, claiming the plan is on shaky legal ground and could endanger national control of budgets.

Barnier’s plan gives the final say on bank closures to the Brussels-based European Commission, the European Union’s executive and regulatory arm. Germany and other countries reject this arrangemen­t, citing potential conflicts of interest for the commission.

Fernandez signaled the potential for compromise, saying that giving the resolution power to the council “is possible.”

“Honestly, this is not the most critical point,” he said.

Dutch Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselblo­em, who chairs meetings of euro-area finance chiefs, said he’d be prepared to discuss the German proposal.

“The Netherland­s prefers that the commission do this,” Dijsselblo­em told reporters in The Hague. “But we can certainly discuss having the Council of the European Union do this on the condition that decisions could be made quickly and effectivel­y. It mustn’t be politicize­d or lead to delays, because resolution decisions must be made quickly.”

Fernandez also made clear that “the scope of the resolution mechanism” is still under discussion, saying “it should cover all banks.”

Steffen proposed a system of voting dependent upon whether public money is involved. If taxpayer funds are needed, that “needs to be approved by the member state,” he said. Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jim Brunsden and Corina Ruhe of Bloomberg News.

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