Call to pursue more integration in euro zone

Published Jan 26, 2015

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European Central Bank policymaker Yves Mersch yesterday called for the euro zone to pursue deeper integration, including a capital markets union that would enable a company in one country to issue a bond in another.

Describing Europe’s Monetary Union as incomplete, Mersch said it would be wrong to sit back and leave the project in its existing form. Rather, developing the union “is a permanent undertaking”, he said. He spoke three days after the ECB agreed a new bond-buying plan that would see chiefly national central banks purchasing bonds and taking on the risk of default. The deal has raised questions about whether ECB policy was still “single” across the euro zone.

Mersch, who sits on the six-member executive board that forms the nucleus of the ECB’s policymaking Governing Council, said capital-market integration would help spread risk across the currency union through the private sector.

“A truly integrated capital market would not only benefit the European economy, because it would ensure an efficient and location-independent allocation of financial resources. It would also bring with it a greater distribution of risk,” he said.

“Economic shocks can then be better absorbed because countries receive a certain amount of protection from the private sector.” – Reuters

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