FOUR years after the bank guarantee scheme was introduced as a panic response to the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the Government is looking at proposals to end the controversial bank scheme before it runs out in December, the Irish Independent has learned.
The Department of Finance has set up an inter-agency working group to discuss a roadmap for scrapping the scheme at some stage, and officials are now looking closely at ending the scheme much more quickly than previously thought.
Officials from the Department of Finance, the Central Bank and the National Treasury Management Agency are currently examining how the banks could be weaned off the eligible liabilities guarantee (ELG) scheme which covers customer deposits of more than €100,000.
There is no talk of removing a separate scheme that guarantees deposits of less than €100,000.
BoI paid 370,000,000 EUR in fees to the Irish government in fees for the ELG this year.
Ciaran, does anybody really care how much it cost the BoI.
The viability of the Irish banks is in everyone's interest or we will be paying for further recapitalisations.
Meanwhile, Mr Boucher said the bank is "prepared and ready" to exit the ELG bank guarantee scheme, which is due to expire at the end of the year.
The Department Of Finance expects the banks to leave the government guarantee scheme in the early part of next year.
Mr Moran told the committee "We would see considerable stability in deposits in Ireland over the past few months, including during period of extreme stress in Europ, spain. We have been doing a lot of work on removing the bank guarantee in the early part of next year. So as next step forward would like to see removal of guarantee early next year".
THE Government expects to phase out its bank guarantee in the first quarter of next year, the Department of Finance said this morning.
It is “safer” to seek approval from the European Commission to extend the guarantee beyond the end of this year, Department of Finance secretary general John Moran said.
The guarantee covers deposits worth €100bn.
Mr Moran, the most senior official in the civil service, said a big step for 2013 would be “to get the banks off” the government guarantee.
The “right call is to get the banks off the guarantee and return them to profitability,” he said at a conference in Dublin.
Ireland gov to introduce legislation next week to give technical approval to extend banking guarantee by further 12 months:Finance Ministry
Minister of State for Finance Brian Hayes said it was the Government’s ambition to “exit the guarantee next year and, hopefully, that will happen”. Early indications were that they could exit the eligible liabilities guarantee scheme “in the first quarter of 2013”, and that would be “another example of weaning the banks off taxpayers’ money”.
Fianna Fáil public expenditure spokesman Seán Fleming said the scheme would be extended only for new deposits made next year, while existing deposits were guaranteed until they matured. He noted that the Department of Finance did not build the scheme into its medium-term fiscal projections.
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