Deutsche Welle
Instead of spending the day with their families on summer
vacation, German parliamentarians have been dragged back for a special
session on Thursday in Berlin to debate whether to approve aid for
troubled Spanish banks. "Don't swim out too far," said President of the German Bundestag
Norbert Lammert at the last session of parliament before the summer
break on the evening of June 29.
Lammert was dropping a hint that lawmakers could well be called back
for a special session as a result of the twists and turns of the
eurozone crisis.
Plenty is happening this summer, too much, in fact, for German parliamentarians to wander to far from home shores.
Troika report
The Spanish government is continuing talks with its European partners
about aid for its troubled banks. Meanwhile, the troika - the European
Commission, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central
Bank - have their bags packed for a trip to Greece, where the group will
review whether the country has met its targets to receive another
tranche of aid. Their report is due out next week.
Angela Merkel and Sigmar Gabriel are at odds on aid
But already last week, German parliamentarians had received notification of a special session to debate aid for Spanish banks. Most Bundestag members agree that aid is necessary to prevent key
Spanish banks from bankruptcy. But not all of them: the left-wing
fraction and some parliamentarians from the other parties oppose the
move. And many in the opposition have made it clear to Chancellor Angela
Merkel that they are growing increasingly concerned about what comes
after the bailouts.
Loss of trust
Since the financial crisis emerged in 2008, eurozone nations have been
contributing to funds to help those members in financial trouble. As a
result, some of them have lost the trust of capital markets, confronted
with horrendously high interest rates to finance their debt. A European
bailout fund was created to help these countries.
ESM chief Klaus Regling has drawn criticism
For the first time, ailing Spanish banks could be able to tap into
rescue funds without having to make a trip to the country's federal
treasury first. The provisional European Financial Stability Facility
(EFSF) would come to the rescue, as the permanent European Stability
Mechanism (ESM) has yet to kick in due to a German constitutional
dispute.
Despite the direct payment, the Spanish state would be liable under the
current rules for banks that nevertheless declare bankruptcy.
The opposition in Berlin, however, has grown sceptical about whether
these rules will remain valid in the future. They're worried that
regardless of whether governments plunge into debt to prop banks or
assume liability for them, the risks in both cases will drive up
interest rates for government bonds.
Determined to eliminate these risks, government leaders meeting at the
recent European Union summit agreed that the ESM could be used to
directly aid banks but only after the launch of a European banking
regulator, which would fall under the wing of the European Central Bank.
It appears in the logic of this agreement that the ESM would be liable
and thus also the countries that pay into the rescue fund. This is how
Eurogroup head Jean-Claude Junker, EU Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli
Rehn and recently appointed ESM head Klaus Regling interpret the
agreement as well.
Hefty criticism
That view, however, has drawn hefty criticism from the opposition. If Angela Merkel intends to transform the rescue of states into a
rescue of speculating banks, then she will have to do so with her own
majority and against opposition from the Social Democratic Party," said
party chief Sigmar Gabriel earlier in the week. "Numerous opposition party members have called on Chancellor
Merkel to clarify whether or not German tax payers would be forced to
take responsibility for foreign banks. And even a member of her
coalition government, Horst Seehofer, head of the Christian Social Union
(CSU), voiced his concern.
In a television interview, Angela Merkel noted that no decision has
been made which would assume liability for direct aid to banks. She said
a first step is for the European Commission to make a recommendation
for a European banking regulator. And in the end, she said, the
Bundestag would take a vote.
Author: Peter Stützle / jrb
Editor: Joanna Impey
Editor: Joanna Impey
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