Following the example of the U.S. Shadow
Financial Regulatory Committee a group of European professors and other
independent experts in the fields of banking, finance and the
regulation of financial institutions and markets set up the European Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee
(ESFRC) in Spring 1998. The chairman of the Committee is Professor Harald
Benink, who is a professor of finance at the Rotterdam School of
Management of Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands and who is
a senior associate to the Financial Markets Group (FMG) of the London
School of Economics (LSE). For contact please send an e-mail to: h.benink@fbk.eur.nl.
Members of the Committee
The ESFRC consists of the following 15 members, coming from 11 European countries and from the United States:
- Harald Benink (Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands & FMG/LSE)
- Tom Berglund (Swedish School of Economics and Business Administration, Helsinki, Finland)
- Christian de Boissieu (University of Paris I - Sorbonne, Paris, France)
- Franco Bruni (Bocconi University, Milan, Italy)
- Jordi Canals (IESE, Barcelona, Spain)
- Richard Dale (University of Southampton, United Kingdom)
- Philip Davis (Brunel University, London, United Kingdom & FMG/LSE)
- Hans Geiger (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
- Friedrich Kübler (Johann Wolfgang Goethe University & Clifford
Chance, Frankfurt, Germany & University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, USA)
- Karel Lannoo (Centre for European Policy Studies, Brussels, Belgium)
- Rosa Lastra (University of London, United Kingdom & FMG/LSE)
- Reinhard Schmidt (Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany)
- Benn Steil (Council on Foreign Relations, New York, USA)
- Niels Thygesen (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
- Clas Wihlborg (Copenhagen Business School, Denmark & Gothenburg University, Sweden)
Press Coverage
Press coverage on the Committee’s activities has included The Economist (London), Financial Times (London), The Banker (London), Euromoney (London), Financial Regulation Report (London), Journal of International Banking Regulation (London), Reuters (London), Dow Jones (London), Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (Frankfurt), Handelsblatt (Frankfurt), Les Echos (Paris), La Tribune (Paris), Il Sole 24 Ore (Milan), Borsa & Finanza (Milan), Expansión (Madrid), Finanz und Wirtschaft (Zurich), Finanzmarkt und Portfolio Management (Luzern), Neue Zürcher Zeitung (Zurich), Børsen (Copenhagen), Dagens Industri (Stockholm), Kauppalehti (Helsinki), Taloussanomat (Helsinki), Rzeczpospolita (Warsaw), Het Financieele Dagblad (Amsterdam), and De Telegraaf (Amsterdam).
Independence of the Committee
The European Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee meets three times
every year. The ‘shadow’ function of the ESFRC is related to the
Committee’s purpose of following and analysing critically the existing
and evolving regulatory framework for financial institutions and
markets. Moreover, at the end of each meeting the ESFRC organises an
international press conference during which a public statement is
issued on topics discussed during its meeting. The Committee is fully
independent of the providers, regulators and supervisors of financial
services whose behaviour it aims to evaluate.
The independence of the ESFRC is also expressed by the fact that the
Committee will not accept sponsoring by financial institutions and
regulatory/supervisory authorities.
Analytical Mission
The analysis of the regulatory framework is based on existing and
proposed European Union directives, national regulations,
recommendations by international forums such as the Basel Committee and
the Group of Thirty, and on relevant academic research in this field.
Typically, the Committee tries to translate concepts drawn from
academic literature into concrete policy recommendations with respect
to certain subject areas. Topics to be covered by the ESFRC during the
coming years could include: remaining barriers to the completion of the
EU single market for financial services, guidelines for the design of
financial services regulation, the pros and cons of universal banking
and bancassurance, banks and derivatives, electronic payment services
by non-banks, supervision of financial conglomerates and non-banks,
supervision on a European level vs. home country control, capital
requirements, and state ownership and/or support of financial
institutions.