Basel III finalisation comes undone: A proposal that lets down citizens and backtracks on global agreements

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#NoMoreCrises: Unkept Promises of Reform

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The power of democracy against the power of finance

All over Europe, youth climate strikers are hitting the streets of cities and pushing to exit our brown,...

Splitting Deutsche Bank?

With a cumulative balance sheet nearly as big as the GDP of the EU-27 (94% as of 2015), the...

The insufficient role of EDIS in restoring trust in banks

Banks are uniquely prone to runs because they borrow short and lend long, creating a maturity mismatch in...

About the decisions taken by European bank regulators and supervisors in the face of the coronavirus crisis

Our analyses of the coronavirus crisis: Bank regulators and supervisors have taken a number of important measures over...

You enjoyed the last financial crisis? You will love the next one, still more devastating…

Can you think of a motorway with no speed limit, where drinking alcohol is permitted, and even making...

The Better Regulation restaurant

Setting the table for Better Regulation? When Frans Timmermans presented the Better Regulation Package in May, he used the analogy...

Caritas France joins the fight to re-regulate finance

Regulating finance is a necessity for all The power of financial markets in shaping our societies wouldn’t be...

The so-called “science” of economics could not care less about forecasting crises

A crisis is a sudden degradation: it becomes systemic when it affects an entire system – which system?...

The stage is being set for another financial crisis

2008: A Crisis We Should Have Learned From In 2008, the world experienced the worst financial crisis since...

Representation of public interest in banking #2 – Who is challenging finance? Examining the diversity of voices in the design of financial regulation

Defining what is the public interest in the regulation of banking and financial markets is difficult, as this...

Financial education; the what, the how, the why…

Financial education is on the agenda again. You probably know the sales pitch: customers who know about financial...

Monitoring derivatives trading books in the current context of financial markets turmoil

OUR ANALYSES OF THE CORONAVIRUS CRISIS: Managing derivatives positions in a controlled manner requires that a number of...

DeFi vs. TradFi: как регуляторы реагируют на децентрализованные финансы?

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Representation of public interest in banking #3 – What blocks public participation in banking?

The activities of Europe’s banks concern all of its citizens: almost everyone has a bank account (World Bank, 2014),...

Finance Watch’s view on the COVID-19 Banking Package

OUR ANALYSES OF THE CORONAVIRUS CRISIS: The COVID-19 Banking Package: More flexibility in the EU’s banking rules On...

Grand Theft Europe scandal – one more reason to #ChangeFinance

A constant shower of damning reports on opacity and scandals in the financial sector is the result of...

From a health crisis to financial turmoil: Supervisors must make sure finance does not backfire

Our analyses of the coronavirus crisis: The crisis of 2007 – 2009 saw the financial sector infect society:...

Plus de dérégulation de la finance ne soutiendra pas les PME

S’exprimant lors des « Conférences citoyennes » à Epinal le 17 avril dernier, Emmanuel Macron a réitéré sa proposition de...

Grand Theft Europe scandal – one more reason to #ChangeFinance

A constant shower of damning reports on opacity and scandals in the financial sector is the result of a worrying lack of democratic control. The controversial appointment of the chief lobbyist of a systemic bank as head of the European banking regulator was a strong reminder of this: when national egos bypass democratic processes to push for their own interests, lobby powers  take full advantage of these loopholes, at society’s expense.

This is a reason why the new generation of trade agreements risks depriving governments of the necessary means to regulate finance. It also explains how the tax avoidance industry flourishes under Europeans’ noses

But all this is not inevitable. A few weeks before crucial European elections, we are proposing two courses of action for committed citizens:

I Vote to make finance serve society

Finance Watch has analysed the financial reform proposals of all political groups for the #European Elections 2019, compared them to our vision for finance that serves  society and scored their ambition to change finance:

Discover our EU election guide 2019

II Demand transparency in lobby practices

More than 1,700 lobbyists work for the financial sector in Brussels. Are your EU parliamentary candidates ready to #ChangeFinance? Ask them to commit themselves to work for better oversight of lobbying, and to improve representativeness in decision-making circles by signing a pledge, already signed by 230 candidates:

Write to your candidates to change finance

 


Source: https://www.finance-watch.org/blog/grand-theft-europe-scandal-one-more-reason-to-changefinance/

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