european cross-border cooperation to safeguard stability & manage crisis in the financial sector

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*Presentation by Per Callesen, May 21, 2010 “ Global Financial Crisis: Lessons for the Stability of the Financial Sector” Conference, Warsaw. Organized by the BGF Guarantee Fund of Poland *Views and assessments are made on a purely personal basis

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European Cross-Border Cooperation to Safeguard Stability & Manage Crisis in the Financial Sector. *Presentation by Per Callesen, May 21, 2010. “ Global Financial Crisis: Lessons for the Stability of the Financial Sector” Conference, Warsaw. Organized by the BGF Guarantee Fund of Poland. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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*Presentation by Per Callesen, May 21, 2010

“ Global Financial Crisis: Lessons for the Stability of the Financial Sector” Conference, Warsaw.

Organized by the BGF Guarantee Fund of Poland

*Views and assessments are made on a purely personal basis

1. Policy implications of the sovereign debt crisis

2. 2008 crisis management benchmarked against the MoU and its principles

3. Revisiting controversial issues in preparing for the 2008 MoU

4. Broader remarks on stability in the financial system

No financial stability with disorderly public finances.

Sustainable public finances are mainly a national interest and obligation. But much needs to be done at the European level as well:

Re-coupling fiscal policy and it’s underlying decisions. Stronger role of the ECOFIN.

Stronger differentiation of fiscal policy advice. Take current account imbalances and inflation into

account in fiscal surveillance. Stronger political follow up with peer pressure,

political and economic sanctions.

The crisis unfolded very differently from anticipated in the MoU, and so did intervention:Case-by-case management given up early. Fairly good EU-cooperation on systemic approach, after a difficult start.Protection went far beyond expectation.Mixed experience of cooperation for intervention in specific institutions.Competition rules important, but difficult.Contagion became an overarching concern across the board.

Assessment Primary Principle Secondary Principle

1. Yes, but Protect stability in all countries Not prevent bank failures

2. No Primacy to private sector solutions Creditors to expect losses

3. Mainly Yes Public money, never taken for granted Only used strictly

4. Yes and No Common concerns for all MS Coop. in normal times

5. Mainly Yes Arrangements & tools designed flexibly Shared assessments

6. YesConsistent with supervision &

prevention

7. Probably NoFull participation ensured for affected

MS

8. Mainly YesPreserve level playing field/state aid

rules

9. Yes Global dimension taken into account

Moral hazard. The discussion on whether to mention possible public intervention has been fully overtaken by events. But setting the conditions remains as difficult.

Preparing for burden sharing. The mood has shifted towards favoring comprehensive preparation. Possibly also to some degree towards ex ante arrangements.

More decisive approach towards cross-border stability groups

An effective financial sector is needed to spur private demand

But it has to become stable Discretion has a limit. Look for automatic

stabilizers, like provisioning. Strong dilemma between need for stronger

competition and preserving stability Don’t forget that bad macroeconomic policies

in good times played a major part Macroeconomic policy mistakes are very

costly