Michael Ioannidis, Senior research fellow, Max Planck Institute for
Comparative Public Law and International Law, Heidelberg.
On 6 December, the European
Commission presented a package of
proposals on the further integration of the Eurozone. This was the first
effort of European institutions to put on paper the rules that could shape
post-crisis EMU, an issue that took centre stage in European politics after
Macron’s election in France and will probably receive a new impetus after the
formation of the new government in Germany. The most important part in
Commission’s package is the proposal to bring the European Stability Mechanism
(ESM) within the EU framework. The ESM, Europe’s main financial assistance
mechanism, was set up in 2012 by an international
treaty between Eurozone Members. For various reasons, legal and political,
it was established as an organization of public international law, outside the
EU. The Commission now proposes that the Council adopts a
Regulation to make the ESM “a unique legal entity under Union law”, change
its name, and add few more tasks to its mandate. Annexed to the proposed
Council Regulation is a
Statute governing the new body that is largely (but not entirely) based on
the current ESM Treaty (ESMT).
Rebranding
The proposed Regulation starts
with a marketing exercise, rebranding the ESM as EMF (European Monetary Fund).
The name EMF was popularised by academics
at the beginning of the crisis as part of the call to establish a European
assistance mechanism, a suggestion that was practically largely realized with
the establishment of the ESM in 2012. The name EMF remained, however, in the
agenda of policy-makers as a symbol of Europe eventually getting its own
regional equivalent of the IMF – and becoming less dependent on the latter in
future crises. The Commission takes on board the widespread charm of the name
EMF – but this is not a choice without its problems.
The new name, having “monetary”
at its centre, alludes to the monetary tasks within the EMU that the TFEU (and
the CJEU in Pringle)
clearly distinguishes from economic policies and ascribes exclusively to the
ECB. Quite expectedly, the body with the closest name to EMF in European
institutional history was the European Monetary Cooperation Fund (EMCF),
established by Regulation
(EEC) No 907/73 with monetary-related tasks. Even if one admits the allure
of IMF’s acronym, two things need to be reminded of. First, the original name
under which the IMF itself was conceived was “International Stabilization Fund”
(ISF). The reason for ultimately adopting IMF instead of ISF was United
Kingdom’s (and JM Keynes’) insistence that the word “stabilization” alluded to
the stabilization funds of the past, used to influence currency exchange rates
and connected to unpleasant British experiences of keeping the pound pegged to
the international gold standard. Such connotations are not of contemporary
concern.
Second, the IMF, which has access
to financial resources through the central bank reserves of its members, has
closer connection with proper monetary authorities than the ESM, which is
financed by issuing bonds in capital markets. The establishment of the European
Financial Stabilisation Mechanism (EFSM) by the EU in 2010, a body within
the EU framework and very similar function with the EMF, attests to the view
that the words “Stability” or “Stabilization” are accurate descriptors of the
function of the future EU financial assistance mechanism. ESF (European
Stability Fund) could thus be a plausible alternative to EMF.
Conditionality
The Commission rebrands the ESM
to mirror the IMF’s name, but it is much more hesitant to give the new body
real IMF-like teeth. There is one single concept that made the Washington-based
prototype famous: conditionality. That is, the power to set and monitor the
conditions under which countries can access IMF resources. In Commission’s
proposal, though, conditionality is not a job for the EMF but mainly for the
Commission itself.
During the crisis, the conditionality task
was shared by three, and later four, institutions: the Commission, the ECB, the
IMF, and, at a later stage, the ESM. The Commission’s proposal deletes all
references of the ESMT on the involvement of the IMF in Eurozone
conditionality, but does not give this role to the EMF. Conditionality is for
the Commission to keep. According to Art. 13 of the proposed EMF Statute,
conditionality is negotiated by the Commission, in liaison with the ECB, and
“in cooperation with the EMF”. “Cooperation” is admittedly a very weak form of
involvement, especially if it’s compared with the phrase “together with” that
previously described IMF involvement in the ESMT. Moreover, MoUs shall be
signed both by the Commission and the EMF. In the ESMT, in contrast, MoUs where
signed by the Commission “on behalf” of the ESM. The phrase “on behalf”,
establishing an agent-principal relation between Commission and the ESM, is now
stricken out, meaning that the Commission becomes legally a co-owner of EMF conditionality.
Finally, under the proposed EMF Statute, compliance with conditionality is
being monitored solely by the Commission, in liaison with the ECB. No role is
explicitly provided for the EMF in this critical phase.
The no-bailout clause and conditions for assistance
At the beginning of the crisis,
when the idea of a financial assistance mechanism for Eurozone Members was
first tabled, Art. 125(1) TFEU appeared to many as a critical legal obstacle.
Art. 125(1) TFEU contains two sentences with two identical prohibitions. The
first is directed to the EU and the second to the Member States. Both the Union
and the Member States “shall not be liable for or assume the commitments” of
(another) Eurozone Member State.
Considering that ESM assistance
could be seen as indirectly amounting to an assumption of commitments, the
Member States thought necessary in 2011 to introduce
Art. 136(3) in the TFEU. According to this provision, “[t]he Member States
whose currency is the euro may establish a stability mechanism to be activated
if indispensable to safeguard the stability of the euro area as a whole. The
granting of any required financial assistance under the mechanism will be made
subject to strict conditionality”. Drafted with the ESM in mind, Art. 136(3) TFEU
only refers to the establishment of a fund by Member States and not by the EU.
It thus “clarifies” only the second sentence of Art. 125(1) TFEU.
Does that mean that establishing
the EMF as an EU body contravenes Art. 125(1) first sentence TFEU? The answer is
no. In Pringle, the CJEU adopted an
interpretation of Art. 125(1) TFEU that allows financial assistance if it is
indispensable for the stability of the Eurozone and is coupled with “strict
conditionality”. Although in Pringle
the Court was called to interpret the second sentence of Art. 125(1) TFEU, that
is directed to the Member States, the first sentence, which will be relevant
for the EMF, should be read in the same way: a Fund established by the EU that
meets Pringle-conditions is compatible with Art. 125(1) TFEU.
Whether the Commission’s proposal
is fully Pringle-compatible, however,
is not straightforward. The proposal introduces a fundamental difference to the
ESMT that seems to go unnoticed in Commission’s explanations of the proposal.
It refers to the objective of the EMF and the conditions for offering
assistance. Currently, under Arts 3(2) and 12 ESMT, assistance is possible “if
indispensable to safeguard the financial stability of the euro area as a whole
and of its Member States”. According to the Commission’s proposal, however, the
EMF can provide assistance if “indispensable to safeguard the financial
stability of the euro area or of its Members” (emphasis added). Deleting the
phrase “as a whole” (in Art. 12) and replacing “and” with “or” (in Arts 3(2)
and 12 of the proposed Statute) means that a crisis that threatens the
stability of a single Member State but not the euro area as a whole can (and
shall) prompt action from the EMF. This is a very important shift of focus from
Eurozone to the Member States.
This change needs to be assessed
in light of the judgment of the CJEU in Pringle and the spirit of Art. 136(3)
TFEU. In paras 136 and 142 of Pringle,
the Court follows para. 5 of the ECB
Opinion on the draft amendment to Art. 136 TFEU, presenting as condition of
financial assistance that such assistance is indispensable for the euro area’s
stability. Moreover, Art. 136(3) TFEU, although not directly applicable to the
Regulation proposal because EMF will be a Union body, expresses the same
central idea: an assistance mechanism may be established with the objective to
offer assistance “if indispensable to safeguard the stability of the euro area
as a whole.”
Control by the Council and the European Parliament
Under the proposal, the EMF is a
“unique body of EU law”, independent, and governed by its own Board of
Governors and Board of Directors. In order to be compatible with the Meroni
principle (the EU law principle which limits the delegation of powers), Art.
3(1) of the proposed Regulation requires that the Council is responsible for approving
a series of important decisions of the EMF Board of Governors and Board of Directors. The Council approves these
decisions following the qualified majority rules provided in Art. 238(3) TFEU.
This arrangement creates two
complications. First, the majority required for Council approval is different
from that envisaged in Art. 4 EMF Statute both in terms of the necessary
thresholds and the basis for their calculation. Art. 238(3) TFEU requires 55%
of the members of the Council representing the participating Member States,
comprising at least 65% of the population of these States while Art. 4 EMF
Statute requires 85% of voting rights that are equal to the number of share
allocated to it in the authorised capital stock of the EMF. It is thus legally
possible that a decision that has the support of 85% of voting rights/shares is
not backed by the minimum of 11 Member States required in the Council. Second,
the Council approval makes the Council, an institution of the whole of the EU,
responsible (also judicially) for the decisions of the EMF, a body of the euro
area.
Moreover, the proposed Regulation
claims to make the EMF accountable to the European Parliament. The EMF is
required to submit reports, respond to oral and written questions, and accept
invitations to its Managing Director. There are two difficulties with such an
accountability scheme. First, these are only reporting obligations and do not
allow the Parliament any influence in the actual decision-making of the EMF.
Second, the European Parliament may not be an adequate forum for EMF
accountability purposes in the first place. Members of the EMF are only euro
area Members, but in the European Parliament and the Council all EU Member
States are being given seats, not only those that have adopted the euro. The
EMF is thus made accountable to institutions with a different composition than
the Members that provide for its capital.
Is Art. 352 TFEU a sufficient legal basis?
The Commission suggests as legal
basis of the proposed EMF Regulation the flexibility clause of Art.
352 TFEU. Art. 352 TFEU allows the Council to adopt measures when Union
action is necessary to attain one of the objectives set out in the Treaties and
the Treaties have not provided the necessary powers in other provisions. The
latter condition is easily met in this case. In Pringle, the CJEU ruled that the Treaties, and Articles 2(3), 5(1),
122(2), and 143(2) TFEU in particular, do not contain an appropriate legal
basis for the establishment of a stability mechanism. Moreover, the objective
of the EMF, namely to ensure the financial stability of the euro area, does
fall within the Union objective to establish an economic and monetary union.
The critical question for the
applicability of Art. 352 TFEU is whether the establishment of the EMF is also
“necessary” to attain those objectives. Here, the picture gets more
complicated. Since the establishment of the ESM in 2012, the Eurozone disposes
of a financial assistance mechanism to assist Members in distress and to
safeguard Eurozone stability. That might mean that the establishment of the EMF
by means of a Regulation is not any more necessary. In order to satisfy Art.
352 TFEU, what needs to pass the necessity test is not the existence of an
assistance fund – such a fund already exists; it is rather the integration of the fund in the EU framework
that the Commission must prove to be necessary. This is a more difficult test
for the EMF proposal.
A final issue with regard to Art.
352 TFEU has to do with the extension of Union competences. In its Opinion
2/94, the CJEU has ruled that Art 352 TFEU “cannot serve as a basis for
widening the scope of [Union] powers beyond the general framework created by
the provisions of the Treaty as a whole and, in particular, by those that
define the tasks and the activities of the [Union].” The question in this
context is whether a future EMF – a Union body – that employs “strict
conditionality” to its funding programmes goes beyond the allocation of powers
the Union, which in the field of economic policy has simply coordinating
competences. The Eurozone experience shows that this is possible. The
macroeconomic conditions that have been tied to financial-assistance packages since
the beginning of the crisis seem to go beyond coordination in intensity and
beyond EU competences in breadth. As long as ESM was an intergovernmental
organization this did not pose such critical competences question – although it
has been raised with regard to the Two Pack reforms. This critical question,
which goes directly into the question of the extent to which the Treaties allow
a real economic Union, will need to be revisited if the EMF plans succeed.
Barnard & Peers: chapter 19
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www.bibliotecapleyades.net
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