Europe moved a step closer to a banking union today with a plan for the European Central Bank to police banks, a cornerstone of the closer fiscal integration designed to end years of financial and economic turmoil in the region.
European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso outlined the proposal in his annual 'state of the union' address, laying out a path to further economic and fiscal integration to underpin the future of the euro currency.
"The crisis has shown that while banks became transnational, rules and oversight remained national," Mr Barroso told members of the European Parliament. "We need to move to common supervisory decisions, namely within the euro area.
"The single supervisory mechanism proposed today will create a reinforced architecture, with a core role for the European Central Bank ... It will be a supervision for all euro area banks."
The proposed banking reforms, which need to be approved by EU member states, aim to break the link between heavily indebted countries and their struggling banks, tackling a core element of the debt crisis that has afflicted Europe since early 2010.
Spain, which is trying to cut its budget deficit in the middle of a recession, has already been offered up to €100 billion in European aid to rescue its most troubled banks. For the plan to work, it will require countries to surrender a degree of sovereignty over supervising their banks.
This has long been a national responsibility, and the proposal has already led to tensions with Germany and Britain.
A banking union foresees three steps: the ECB gets the power to monitor all euro zone banks and others in the wider EU that agree to the oversight; the establishment of a fund to close troubled banks; and a fully fledged scheme to protect citizens' deposits across the euro zone.
Establishing a common framework for dealing with problem banks would mark a departure from the previously haphazard approach taken by the euro zone's 17 members that has frustrated investors and helped drive up borrowing costs for weaker states.
"The challenge is gigantic," said Nicolas Veron, an expert in EU financial policy with think-tank Bruegel. "It's not just banking union. Banking reform is part of a broader agenda of integration that has been made more pressing by the crisis."
Handing powers of supervision to the ECB also unlocks the possibility of direct aid to banks from the euro zone's permanent rescue scheme, the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), although it is not clear when Spain and others would benefit.
Under the terms of the proposal, the ECB would be at the head of the current fragmented system of national regulators, with the power to police, penalise and even close banks across the euro zone.
The ECB would also gain powers to monitor banks' liquidity closely and require them to keep more capital to protect themselves against future losses.
Reaching agreement on the terms of the union could be complicated, delaying the introduction of the new regime beyond the target set by euro zone leaders of the beginning of next year.
Germany, the euro zone's economic heavyweight, is opposed to allowing the ECB supervise all euro zone lenders. Berlin says the central bank will be overstretched if it has to monitor all 6,000 euro zone banks. Commission officials argue that even small banks can cause a wider crisis, as happened at Britain's Northern Rock.
Although Britain, outside the euro zone, will not join the scheme, many international banks in London have operations in the euro zone that will be affected by the ECB's new supervisory reach.
Reuters