Analyse: La partie n’est pas encore terminée pour la Directive relative aux exigences de fonds propr

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Dans cet article du Centre of European Policy Studies  publié en février 2006, Rym Ayadi  examine la Directive relative aux exigences de fonds propres et soutient que plusieurs questions sont toujours en suspens et doivent être davantage analysées avant que la directive puisse pleinement entrer en vigueur. 

CEPS Summary

After seven long years of difficult negotiations, the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD) finally got through the European Parliament in September 2005, and was formally approved by the Council of Ministers in October. This new legislation transposes the complex, risk-sensitive Basel II framework designed by the Basel Committee into EU law which will apply to all credit institutions and investment firms operating in the 25 member states from January 2007 onwards for the simple approach and from January 2008, for the more advanced approach to measuring credit and operational risks. In this new Policy Brief, CEPS Research Fellow Rym Ayadi cautions that several issues that will determine the successful implementation of the CRD are still on hold and need to be looked at carefully. Among the issues she analyses are the future of comitology in the Directive, the impact of the new results of the fifth quantitative impact study for European institutions, the impact of the uneven implementation dates in the EU and the US, and the pure European issues that were extensively addressed but only partially resolved. 

To read the full article, please 
click here.

 

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