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Stellenangebot registrierenDie Finanzkrise ändere einige festgefahrene britische Gewohnheiten, erklärt Philip Whyte, ein angesehener Forscher beim Centre for European Reform, in einer Analyse vom Februar 2009.
On February 25th, a Commission-appointed taskforce headed by Jacques de Larosière published a report on financial supervision in the EU. The same date, Lord Turner, the Chairman of the UK’s Financial Services Authority (FSA), gave evidence to a parliamentary committee. “What light does Lord Turner’s evidence shed on the UK’s likely reception on the Larosière report”, asks Philip Whyte.
Successive British governments’ reticence to EU integration can partly be explained by “UK’s ‘light touch’ regulatory regime”, says Philip Whyte. Nevertheless, if “domestic opposition to joining the single currency remains as strong as ever, the crisis has called into question the merits of ‘light touch’ regulation”, he explains.
Indeed, according to Lord Turner’s, “the era of light touch regulation [is] over”, quotes Philip Whyte. The Chairman of the UK’s FSA promised in his evidence a ‘revolution’ in financial regulation with “tougher capital rules for banks and capital, and liquidity rules for previously large, unregulated institutions such as hedge funds”.
The Larosière report proposes building two separate structures:
“Although Larosière’s report does not recommend the establishment of a single, pan-European regulator the British government may still find it difficult to cede new powers to EU bodies”, analyses Whyte. “This is a shame, because there may be no way to reconcile political constraints with the needs of the moment”, concludes Philip Whyte.