Date: 2015
Type: Technical Report
European Banking Union : democracy, technocracy and the state of integration
Technical Report, Florence School of Banking & Finance (FBF), Event Brief, 2015/02
SCHLOSSER, Pierre, European Banking Union : democracy, technocracy and the state of integration, Florence School of Banking & Finance (FBF), Event Brief, 2015/02 - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/36481
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
The European Banking Union’s institutional structure, democratic legitimacy and future outlook were discussed at a conference organised by the European Uni¬versity Institute on the 22 May 2015. The conference brought together lawyers, economists and political scientists as well as EU practitioners to discuss the nature of the processes that gave rise to the banking union. Its aim was to retrace the de-cision-making process leading to the Banking Union and to address the trade-off between efficient problem solving, on the one hand, and democratic legitimation on the other. Given the emergence of new conflict lines among and within Eu¬ropean Member States (creditors/debtors; pro-centralization/anti-centralization; banks/tax-payers), another central intellectual concern was to understand how the adopted institutional arrangements reflected these frictions, and how they are likely to influence the functioning of the Banking Union in the future. The Banking Union represents a substantial set of new competencies for the Eu¬ropean Union. Building on the diversity of participants’ disciplinary backgrounds, the conference hence discussed some of the legal and political issues this delega¬tion of competencies raises. One was the extent to which the Banking Union looks similar or different to the way EU competences in competition policy have devel-oped and more generally to the regulation of the single market. There were broad concerns about the accountability of the current institutional arrangements, and indeed a lively debate about what the demands of democratic legitimacy entail and how accountability mechanisms could be designed in the case of the Banking Union. Whether the future of the Banking Union involves continued muddling through, or whether it will eventually require a strong fiscal capacity and thus treaty change, was a lively topic of discussion.
Additional information:
The Florence School of Banking & Finance is a European platform bringing together practitioners and academics from the Banking and Finance sector to develop a common culture of regulation and supervision in the European Union.
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/36481
Full-text via DOI: 10.2870/948888
ISBN: 9789290843245
ISSN: 2443-7980
External link: http://fbf.eui.eu
Series/Number: Florence School of Banking & Finance (FBF); Event Brief; 2015/02