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All the national banking authorities would be operating with the same rules
-- rules that would enable to intervene early, require banks to draw up recovery plans, and even to dismiss the bank's management. If a bank was about to fail, national authorities would have the power to sell or merge the businesses, to create a temporary "bridge bank" to carry out essential functions, to separate good assets from bad ones, and to write down the bank's debts. "The resolution tools will ensure that essential functions are preserved without the need to bail out the institution, and that shareholders and creditors bear an appropriate part of the losses," the commission said in an explanatory statement on the proposal. This last part -- having the bank's unsecured creditors take losses -- is being termed a "bail-in" in contrast to a taxpayer-funded bailout. Barnier acknowledged that the proposal would not have an immediate effect, but he said EU officials need to take both short-term and long-term actions to regain financial stability.
[Associated
Press;
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