The story appears on

Page A14

April 19, 2010

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Business » Economy

ECB head cautions bank levy not to disturb financial reform

EUROPEAN Central Bank chief Jean-Claude Trichet has warned that any new bank levy or tax to pay for future bank collapses has to be carefully designed not to interrupt global financial reform efforts.

European Union finance ministers are working on ways for the financial sector to cope with banks that run into trouble. One of the options is having banks pay a fee toward a "resolution fund" that would help unwind banks as a last resort.

Governments are keen to prevent a repeat of the recent financial crisis when rescuing dozens of banks and guaranteeing deposits forced them to pay out billions of euros, adding to their mounting public debt.

Trichet warned on Saturday that the EU should not jump ahead of work done by international banking regulators, the Basel committee, or the Financial Stability Board, a group of global financial experts who make recommendations to the Group of 20 economies.

"We need the right calibration of any taxes and levies or any sort of concepts that must be applied," he said. "Sequentially it's very important that we are certain that we are doing what is necessary in terms of the Basel committee and the FSH and the G-20, what's necessary to make sure banking and financial systems are robust and resilient."

EU Financial Services Commissioner Michel Barnier asked EU nations to adopt the "polluter pays" principle, telling them that banks should jointly pay the price of rescuing one of them by contributing to a fund.

"It would be a guarantee that enough funds are available in case of difficulties," he said, promising to put forward a more detailed plan in June that could be turned into draft rules next year.

But the speed of some European regulation has already alarmed the United States. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has complained that the EU was moving too fast to regulate hedge funds, warning that extra requirements for foreign-based funds could be a protectionist barrier that went against G-20 commitments for all regions to coordinate reforms.

Spanish Elena Salgado, who led the talks because Spain holds the EU's six-month presidency, said the EU's 27 nations didn't have "total consensus" on choosing between a tax on financial transactions or a straight levy on banks.

"We have to keep on discussing tools for resolving crises," she said. "At this stage, no decision has been taken on this score."

Any levy "should be a supplement, certainly not replace" other work to prevent crisis, she told reporters at the end of two days of talks.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend