Towards Basel IIITowards Basel III

FEPS sur Facebook



RSS IconActualités
RSS Icon Evénements

Restez informés!

Do you wish to edit your profile?

Enter the email address by which you're registered here, and a link to the administration will be sent to your account:


Towards Basel III: Regulating the financial sector after the crisis


Photo: Thomas DELSOL/FEPS

A high-level roundtable organised by FEPS, the Initiative for Policy Dialogue, Friends of Europe and the Financial Times


Bibliothèque Solvay, Brussels    |    12 October '09
09:00-17:30

[conference report]

[check pressroom for release]    [photos of the event]

In the wake of the financial turmoil and despite massive liquidity injection provided by public institutions, the banking sector remains unstable. Taking into account the G20 Summit's request to introduce counter-cyclical buffers, the roundtable will debate how to reform the pro-cyclical Basel II banking supervision agreements.

It offers the opportunity to consider the lessons learned from national experiments with counter-cyclicality in both developing and developed countries while discussing the necessity of capital cushions to make the banking sector more resilient in the face of future instability.

The event will bring some 40 high-level experts, policymakers, business leaders, bankers and social partners from all over the world, as well as a number of top representatives from emerging countries. Will be present, among others: Joaquin Almunia (Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs), Poul Nyrup Rasmussen (President of the Party of European Socialists), Yaga Venugopal Reddy (Former Governor of the Reserve Bank of India),  Joseph Stiglitz (Nobel prize in Economics 2001), Stephany Griffith-Jones (Head of Financial Markets of the Initiative for Policy Dialogue at Columbia University), Stefan Walter, Secretary General of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision.


Participants and Format

50 discussants will sit around the table. Their backgrounds will cover the wide array of stakeholders involved in finance, they will be policymakers, business leaders, MEPs and social partners' representatives from all over the world.

Some 100 observers will attend the debate and will include European and international press.

Each session will be opened by introductory discussants, delivering short, sharp remarks. Then the moderators will kick off the debate by taking comments from the discussants and putting questions to them. The style will be informal, spontaneous, with no room for prepared speeches. We want round table participants to engage in a lively exchange of opinions. A rapporteur will write a summary of the debate, which will be largely disseminated.

[programme]    [related documents]    [list of discussants]


Bookmark and Share

Prochains événements

21.09.2010

Meeting with the foundations of Europe - Brussels, Belgium

As it does every year, FEPS will be gathering together its member foundations and think tanks in order to develop in common the strategies and lines of work for the year 2011.

28.10.2010

Next Left Focus Group: “A progressive socio-economic paradigm for Europe” - Brussels, Belgium

At the end of October, the FEPS Next Left Focus Group, chaired by Dr Alfred Gusenbauer, will meet for its third session of this year, where it will focus on “A progressive socio-economic paradigm for Europe.”

29.10.2010

3rd Young Academics Network Meeting - Vienna, Austria

At the end of October, the FEPS Young Academics Network will hold its third meeting of this year, in which the participants will discuss research papers and develop them through working groups.

Valid XHTML

Dessin et programmation: techPolitics - Système de gestion: Typo3
©2010 Fondation européenne d'études progressistes - FEPS
Avec le soutien financier du Parlement européen