Financial crisis and the EU: how to restore trust
Rebuilding
Europe's Financial
Confidence
How can Europe rebuild confidence in its financial markets and institutions? The role of the
European Central Bank is discussed, especially in the
EU institutions and its monetary policy of quantitive easing.
Since the
US Federal Reserve Bank changed tack and raised interest rates for the first time in nearly a decade, the European Central Bank (
ECB) and its quantitative easing (QE) strategy – a trillion-euro programme to buy bonds – have come under more scrutiny. “The ECB policy is working, QE is working,” insisted
Benoît Coeuré,
Member of the ECB's
Executive Board. “We've seen a tremendous improvement in the Eurozone's capital markets and banking markets; funding costs are down, funding volumes are up and accelerating. We want to make QE work on a continuous basis,” he said.
The financial sector, which is still trying to cope with the fallout from the 2008 global market meltdown and the
Eurozone crisis, is looking for policy and regulatory clarity and cooperation among national governments, Coeuré observed. The daunting challenge: coping with the banking and capital markets union and new banking rules aimed at preventing another crisis. Banking chiefs are worried that banks will have a hard time turning a profit.
Axel A. Weber,
Chairman of the Board of Directors,
UBS Group, went so far as to criticize QE: “We understand that there may be no limit to what the ECB is willing to do, but there is a very clear limit to what QE can and will achieve. That’s the problem – that monetary policy has largely run its course. Further stimulus by reducing interest rates even more into the negative, hinted at by ECB
President Mario Draghi in a
Frankfurt press conference the day before he appeared at
Davos, would be “tampering with fate,” reckoned Weber. “There is a risk that you may actually drive cash out of the economy if you start taxing deposits.”
On top of that, some banks remain under a cloud, with worries about their non-performing loans (NPLs) lingering due to persistent worries about contagion.
Italy and
Portugal have been the focus of attention. Italy has considered setting up a “bad bank” to clean up bank balance sheets and is also trying to turn around sentiment by pushing forward structural reforms.
Playing the role of responsible technocrat,
Pier Carlo Padoan, Italy’s
Minister of Economy and Finance, echoed Draghi’s assertion made earlier in the same Davos session that the central bank should not have to shoulder all the work and that national governments have to pursue structural changes in tandem.
Italy is reforming its labour market with some success and is poised to take measures to bolster the banking sector, Padoan noted. “My
point is that on the impact of monetary policy, there is a division of labour here.
National governments know very well that, to make the most of [the ECB’s] positive policy stance, we need to do our homework.” The minister conceded that Italy should have set up a bad-bank mechanism a long time ago.
The Spanish took that course in response to the country’s banking crisis three years ago,
Francisco González, Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer of
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (
BBVA), recalled. “
Spain has bitten the bullet for about three or four years by putting the house in order and we have taken very good decisions in mainly scrapping the failing banks and now the system is working much better,” he explained. But his country’s banks are still not fully out of the woods, he said.
Banks have to take the low-interest, low-inflation conditions seriously. “
Apart from this, there’s a big threat from digital disruption,” he warned, remarking that Europe’s banks are behind the curve on fintech innovation.
This debate was developed in partnership with
CNBC.
Speakers:
Geoff Cutmore, Francisco González,
Lord Jonathan Hill, Pier Carlo Padoan, Benoît Coeuré, Axel A. Weber
Topics:
Global Economy,
Global Finance
I created this video with the YouTube
Video Editor (
http://www.youtube.com/editor)
More info on: https://www.weforum.org/events/world-economic-forum-annual-meeting-2016/sessions/rebuilding-europe-s-financial-confidence
Find me on
Google+: https://plus.google.com/101008368651984597200
And on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoS2gqkLY6M88GUQgmnbKuA
And subscribe on YouTube!: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoS2gqkLY6M88GUQgmnbKuA?sub_confirmation=1
Website: http://europeanunionexplained.blogspot.com
- published: 13 May 2016
- views: 1