Economic crisis: the European Parliament's response

Published: 14 May 2009 y., Thursday

 

Eurai
The speed and depth of the financial crisis has been brutal and over the last year MEPs have been hard at work on a two-fold approach to the crisis: first, by introducing a clearer European regulatory system with more banking supervision, and second, by trying to mitigate the effects of the recession on peoples' lives.

Tighter bank supervision, stricter credit rules
 
In October, a few weeks after the full outbreak of the crisis in Europe, MEPs told the EU's executive, the European Commission, that they wanted new legislation to improve the supervision and regulation of financial services in Europe. Concrete results were approved in April and May and include:
 
the Capital Requirements Directive, which sets down new rules to increase transparency, improve supervision and ensure proper risk management for banks.the Solvency II Directive creates new rules for the supervision of insurance companies, by introducing more sophisticated solvency requirements. stricter rules for credit rating agencies which should improve the transparency and independence of European credit rating. 
MEPs have also backed measures to help combat rising unemployment:
 
they agreed to widen the scope of the “Globalisation Adjustment Fund” to help workers who lose jobs because of the crisisthey backed full rights for temporary workers full rights from day 1they widened the scope of vocational training and educationMEPs also backed a maximum average 48 hour working week, with no opt outs, however they couldn't reach agreement with ministers so the Working Time directive has gone back to the drawing board.

Other measures
 
MEPs also backed a series of other proposals to bolster economies during the crisis:
 
Parliament twice agreed to raise the ceiling for loans to EU countries that are not in the eurozone and which are more exposed to the impact of the downturn, to €25 billion in November from €12 billion and then to  €50 billion in April.
 
In December they broadly backed the €200 billion financial stimulus package.
 
Also in December, they also agreed to increase bank deposit guarantees - so if a European bank fails, citizens' savings should be guaranteed up to €100,000.
 
Parliament is also calling for the Small Business Act to be made legally binding and wants a uniform statute for the European private company.
 
The majority of MEPs welcomed the result of the G20 summit in London, which agreed $1.1 trillion to encourage economic stability and a recovery in international finance, credit and trade, as well as to strengthen regulation of financial markets. But they also called on world leaders to agree on the closure of all tax and regulatory havens and regulatory loopholes.

 

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

AB Bank SNORAS increases the capital amounting to LTL 72.5 million

On 31 August 2009 in a non-public way AB Bank SNORAS issued the emission of perpetual debt securities included into the bank capital amounting to LTL 72.5 million. more »

EU invests €6.8m for academic cooperation with industrialised countries in North America

The European Commission, through its longstanding cooperation with the US and Canada, announces the launch of 33 new and innovative projects involving universities and training institutions on both sides of the Atlantic. more »

The European Commission and the cosmetic industry match research funds to develop alternative solutions to animal testing

Today at the VII World Congress on Alternatives and Animal Use in the Life Sciences in Rome, the European Commission and the European cosmetic industry presented their joint financial effort for research into alternative safety testing methods. more »

SEB Bank invests LTL 4.6 million in to faster data transmission technologies

SEB Bank, the largest bank in Lithuania, invests almost LTL 4.6 million in to the upgrade of its data transmission network. more »

World Bank Supports Further Improvement of Rural Road Network in Armenia (39280)

The World Bank’s Board of Executive Directors today approved a credit of US$ 36.6 million equivalent of additional financing for the Lifeline Road Improvement Project for Armenia. more »

IMF Completes First Review Under Stand-By Arrangement with Latvia and Approves €195.2 Million Disbursement

The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) today completed the first review of Latvia's performance under an economic program supported by a 27-month Stand-By Arrangement. more »

Commission approves the restructuring of Austrian Airlines

The Commission has today decided to close the formal investigation procedure into the privatisation and restructuring of Austrian Airlines concluding that the restructuring following its sale to Lufthansa is compatible with community law. more »

Wall Street applauds Bernanke

Ben Bernanke's reappointment as head of the Federal Reserve did not come as a surprise, but Wall Street still responded with the proverbial thumbs up. more »

Statistics on hotels in Lithania

Over I half-year 2009 accommodation establishments had by 22 per cent less guests. more »

Carbon fund set up by EBRD and EIB in 1st Russian venture

In the first such transaction in Russia, carbon credits generated by utilising gas which would otherwise be flared at an oilfield in eastern Siberia are to be purchased through a carbon fund set up by the EBRD and the European Investment Bank (EIB), the Multilateral Carbon Credit Fund (MCCF). more »