The recent crises have shown that the eurozone countries’ government debt is not immune to default. Applying a large-exposure requirement also to eurozone government debt would be a logical measure towards breaking the bank-government doom loop, given the low probability and high loss-given government default. But what would be the impact of the application of the large-exposure requirement on the banking sector as well as on government funding? This CEPS Policy Brief presents the results of a simulation exercise performed for 109 systemic banks in the eurozone, showing that their eurozone government debt portfolios would have to decrease by 3.2% or €63 billion, if a 50% of own-funds cap would be applied on large exposures. The eurozone cen...
The diabolical loop between the solvency of the banking system and the sovereign fiscal position is ...
Drawing an analogy with the ill-fated Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) of the pre-eurozone era, Paul De...
In this analytical policy brief, CEPS Director Daniel Gros explores whether there is a fundamental d...
Unlike the banking crisis of 2008; when governments had significantly lower debt burdens, government...
In many eurozone countries, domestic banks often hold more than 20% of domestic public debt, which i...
This paper asserts that the contagion currently afflicting sovereign bond markets in the eurozone ca...
The crisis has underlined the strong interdependence between the euro-area banking and sovereign cri...
A key remaining issue for the completion of the Banking Union is the concentrated exposure of banks ...
Despite cobbling together an impressive $1 trillion rescue package for countries with potential fund...
EU policy-makers, led by Germany, have a last chance to work together with the private sector to pro...
The European Central Bank’s quantitative easing programme is scheduled to start this month. John Dou...
The banking system of the euro area can be stabilised even without creating a new ‘safe’ asset. The ...
Banks in the northern eurozone have capital ratios that are, on average, less than half of the capit...
The government debt crisis, erupted in the Eurozone in 2009, nearly led to the collapse of European ...
As the Eurozone debt crisis reaches a turning point, this Policy Brief argues for a more organised i...
The diabolical loop between the solvency of the banking system and the sovereign fiscal position is ...
Drawing an analogy with the ill-fated Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) of the pre-eurozone era, Paul De...
In this analytical policy brief, CEPS Director Daniel Gros explores whether there is a fundamental d...
Unlike the banking crisis of 2008; when governments had significantly lower debt burdens, government...
In many eurozone countries, domestic banks often hold more than 20% of domestic public debt, which i...
This paper asserts that the contagion currently afflicting sovereign bond markets in the eurozone ca...
The crisis has underlined the strong interdependence between the euro-area banking and sovereign cri...
A key remaining issue for the completion of the Banking Union is the concentrated exposure of banks ...
Despite cobbling together an impressive $1 trillion rescue package for countries with potential fund...
EU policy-makers, led by Germany, have a last chance to work together with the private sector to pro...
The European Central Bank’s quantitative easing programme is scheduled to start this month. John Dou...
The banking system of the euro area can be stabilised even without creating a new ‘safe’ asset. The ...
Banks in the northern eurozone have capital ratios that are, on average, less than half of the capit...
The government debt crisis, erupted in the Eurozone in 2009, nearly led to the collapse of European ...
As the Eurozone debt crisis reaches a turning point, this Policy Brief argues for a more organised i...
The diabolical loop between the solvency of the banking system and the sovereign fiscal position is ...
Drawing an analogy with the ill-fated Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) of the pre-eurozone era, Paul De...
In this analytical policy brief, CEPS Director Daniel Gros explores whether there is a fundamental d...