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European Cross-Border Banking and Banking Supervision (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,758
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European Cross-Border Banking and Banking Supervision (Hardcover)
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This new work provides timely analysis of the cross-border exercise
of banking activity in the EU and its supervision, from the
perspective of the 'home-host rule'. It examines the current system
and the efficacy of recent reforms considering whether the
centralisation of decision making and a more effective
mutualisation of financing tools could improve the safety and
soundness of the EU banking system and reduce the asymmetry of
information between home and host authorities. The EU banking
market is very integrated since banking institutions based in the
Union are free to perform their activities within the single
market. This has allowed EU banking institutions to significantly
increase their cross border operations. This way of working is
based on the home country control principle according to which EU
institutions performing cross border activities continue to be
supervised by their home country supervisor. However, this system
has raised challenges for effectively performing supervision,
resolution and crisis management of banking groups operating across
the borders of many different jurisdictions. This book analyses how
far recent reforms under the banking union regime have addressed
these issues to ensure the integrity and stability of the European
integration project. It utilises data to illustrate the cross
border exposures between member states and how they influence home
and host decision making. But it equally explores those areas that
still remain within the national discretion such as non-performing
loans, insolvency-liquidation of banks and deposit protection
arrangements, to mention a few. The book analyses the main pillars
of the banking union: the single supervisory mechanism (SSM); and
the Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM) and the proposed European
Deposit Insurance Scheme (EDIS); and the related tools designed to
provide crisis management under the European Stability Mechanism
(ESM). As such the work considers the impact of the Single
Rulebook. In considering these pieces of regulation and mechanisms
the book analyses how international standards and EU requirements
undertake to divide responsibilities between the home and host
state and the extent to which they align interests between the home
and host and minimise potential conflicts of interests. In this
analysis examples from a set of EU cross-border banks are used to
illustrate the workings of home and host relationship between
Member States and Third Countries, and the benefits of
participating in centralisation of decision making and
mutualisation of financing in resolution and depositor protection.
This work provides a valuable resource for academics researching on
central banking union and regulation, and helps legal practitioners
to address questions of supervision, resolution and insolvency with
a cross-border element.
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