ASSESSMENTS

European Union: Weak Economies Remain Vulnerable to Banking Crises

Jul 25, 2014 | 09:00 GMT

European Union: Weak Economies Remain Vulnerable To Banking Crises
Customers line up in front of a branch of Bulgaria's First Investment Bank in Sofia on June 27.

(NIKOLAY DOYCHINOV/AFP/Getty Images)

Summary

Over the past two years, the European Union has created an environment in which member states facing economic problems can borrow at relatively low interest rates. Because of the European Central Bank's promise of intervention in debt markets, a sovereign debt crisis similar to what Greece experienced in 2010 seems unlikely. High unemployment and weak economic activity, however, continue to undermine the banking sectors of several EU countries, where a growing number of households and companies are struggling to pay back their bank loans.

While it is impossible to predict exactly when and where Europe's next banking crisis will take place, trouble is more likely in states such as Italy or Greece. Outside the eurozone, banks in Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria will also struggle to reduce their portfolio of nonperforming loans. Since a banking crisis is essentially a crisis of confidence, a relatively small event in a secondary country could trigger EU-wide fears of a generalized crisis.

 

In spite of EU efforts to bring calm to financial markets, weak economies and high unemployment will continue to undermine the banking sector, especially in peripheral states....

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