Emergency Credit Suisse rescue shakes faith in Switzerland
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[April 15, 2023] By
John Revill and Noele Illien
ZURICH/BERN (Reuters) -Switzerland's tradition of dependable consensus
politics has taken a battering after the government used an emergency
law to push through a state-backed mega-merger of UBS and Credit Suisse,
sidelining the country's parliament.
Switzerland's two parliamentary chambers voted to reject the
government's 109 billion Swiss francs ($122.82 billion) in aid for the
deal between the country's two biggest banks, delivering a slap in the
face for government.
The defeat is symbolic as it cannot change the merger, but it is a blow
for the government in an election year and makes it harder to build
broad support among the population for the biggest corporate rescue in
Swiss history.
The use of emergency laws, in which shareholders and parliamentarians
have no say, will also damage the standing of Switzerland's financial
industry abroad, analysts have said, especially as it faces rising
competition from other financial centres like Singapore.
The Swiss political model is under pressure at the moment, said
political scientist Michael Hermann, a director of pollsters Sotomo,
adding that the foreign perception of Switzerland as business friendly
and as a financial safe haven could be undermined.
"Legitimacy in Swiss politics has been weakened, People who worried
about an over powerful government during COVID will see their fears
confirmed," said Hermann.
"This is damaging for the trust in democracy – parliament says no, but
the emergency credits still go through."
A recent Sotomo poll showed two thirds of the population was against the
UBS takeover of Credit Suisse, while a third of respondents were angry
that emergency laws had been used to bypass parliament.
The affair has already boosted support for populist right wing groups
like the anti-immigrant Swiss People's Party (SVP) and the libertarian
Aufrecht Schweiz movement in local elections since the takeover. Both
parties are looking to make gains in national elections in October.
PARLIAMENT 'CIRCUMVENTED'
The Credit Suisse/UBS merger marked the first time that parliament had
withheld its support for emergency laws designed to deal quickly with
crises.
The facility to act without parliamentary approval, introduced in 2000,
was used during the COVID pandemic to enforce restrictions and again
last year to provide a Swiss energy producer with a credit line.
In the lead-up to the UBS/Credit Suisse merger last month, Swiss
emergency law allowed a sub-group of six members of parliament to
approve a cabinet plan to give financial aid on behalf of the
legislative body, angering the almost 250 lawmakers, who were left
without a say.
Swiss Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter defended the use of the
emergency powers, saying Switzerland was not an "emergency
dictatorship."
"We don't do it for fun. We really didn't know what else to do,"
Keller-Sutter told parliament during a stormy emergency session this
week. "The emergency law is based on the federal constitution and I
don't think it's correct to say it's illegal."
[to top of second column] |
The logo of Credit Suisse is pictured on
a building near the Hallenstadion where took place the Annual
General Meeting, two weeks after being bought by rival UBS in a
government-brokered rescue, in Zurich, Switzerland, April 4, 2023.
REUTERS/Pierre Albouy
Lawmakers were dismayed.
"It has not been a great moment for Swiss democracy. It is terrible
parliament has been put in this position and basically
circumvented," said Roger Nordmann, leader of the Social Democrat
group in the Swiss lower house told Reuters.
The Swiss government said it would take into account the rejection
by parliament, but stressed the success of the takeover of
Switzerland's second biggest bank - intended to prevent a financial
meltdown - was paramount.
Industry experts said the deal was unlikely to be changed by
politicians, with UBS being given a free hand to determine how many
jobs will go and what will be done with Credit Suisse's valuable
domestic retail banking business.
Swiss media has reported that the takeover could result in the
combined bank cutting its Swiss workforce by up to 30%, which could
cost 11,000 jobs.
"Despite the anger, most policy-makers do not want to interfere in
the merger, to create and bear the risk that the merger does not
succeed," said Hans Gersbach, co-director of the KOF economic
research institute at ETH Zurich.
"Politicians might have wanted to show their disapproval about what
happened, but they don’t want the UBS takeover to fail."
Ultimately, 209 billion Swiss francs are being provided as state and
central bank guarantees and support in the plan drawn up by the
seven-strong Swiss cabinet, which has members from four political
parties.
The amount is equivalent to around a quarter of Switzerland's entire
economic output, and includes emergency liquidity injections and a
state pledge to absorb up to 9 billion francs in losses incurred by
UBS, based on documents outlining the deal.
Peter Kunz, an expert in economic law at the University of Bern,
said the lawmakers were ultimately powerless to change it.
"In Switzerland, we often pat ourselves on the back for having the
oldest democracy in the world. Yet seven people decided on 250
billion francs of support, an unimaginably huge sum of money," he
said.
"And the parliament has no say in the matter. The use of such
emergency legislation, overturning antitrust rules, is a problem for
Swiss democracy and rule of law. It calls Swiss democracy into
question."
($1 = 0.8875 Swiss francs)
(Reporting by John Revill, additional reporting John O'Donnell.
Editing by Jane Merriman)
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