BBC
11 December
2013 Last updated at 11:31 GMT
The EU is
edging towards a common mechanism for rescuing problem banks, in a drive to
avoid any repetition of taxpayer-funded bailouts.
EU finance
ministers finished marathon talks early on Wednesday - but they will try again
next week to reach a deal on the eve of an EU summit.
Bank
failures triggered the eurozone financial crises that struck the Republic of Ireland ,
Spain and Cyprus .
The new
rescue blueprint would involve transferring powers to a new EU agency.
There are
arguments over the future scope of that agency's powers - and the plan still
has to be agreed with the European Parliament.
It is not
yet clear how the new arrangement would affect business in the City of London , by far the
biggest financial centre in the EU.
A common
eurozone rescue fund would not bail out UK banks like Northern Rock, which
nearly collapsed in 2007. Yet many banks in London do most of their business in the
eurozone.
"We
have come a long way," German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said. The
ministers agreed that in future the burden of bailing out a troubled bank
should fall not on taxpayers but on the investors and creditors, he said.
Under the
plan, an EU Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM) would be developed over 10 years,
with a joint rescue pot of up to 55bn euros (£46bn; $76bn).
German
concerns
It would be
the second pillar of an EU banking union. The first pillar - the Single
Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) - will take shape next year, with the European
Central Bank acquiring powers to monitor the activities of all the major
eurozone banks.
The third
pillar would be a joint guarantee scheme for bank depositors. Currently each
country operates its own national guarantee scheme, though there is an agreed
EU-wide ceiling of 100,000 euros per depositor.
"We
have made great progress... we are 95% of the way there," said French
Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici.
Correspondents
say Germany , unlike France , does
not want the SRM's remit to extend to all of the eurozone's 6,000 banks.
A statement
after the ministers' meeting spoke of "minimising taxpayers' exposure to
losses".
The SRM
would require banks across Europe to have
detailed recovery plans in place and keep them regularly updated, so that
effective action could be taken quickly if their finances deteriorated.
EU banks
are bracing for new, more rigorous "stress tests" next year. The ECB
hopes the checks will expose any weaknesses that could pose wider risks for the
eurozone.
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