Set to reject Central Bank [broken link removed]for a statutory solvency support scheme, ILCU is to ask its member credit unions to agree to its latest plan. This is the trade body that campaigned against a state backed guarantee for savers right up to September 2008.
It’s a plan that would see it supervise credit unions for compliance with prudential standards. It wants to spin its small solvency support fund into a wholly owned subsidiary that would set standards, monitor them and act to sort out insolvent credit unions. ILCU has also demanded that regulation of credit unions be switched from the Central Bank to the Department for Trade Enterprise and Employment as it says some volunteers thought the current regulator was over-zealous.
Solvency support funds, called stablisation, are used to provide temporary solvency to an insolvent credit unions providing they can demonstrate a viable work out plan. But and the big but is this should only be done where it is cheaper to closing them down or merging them. Cheaper means that savers funds are best protected and the guarantee doesn’t have to be called on. Stabilisation is rarely used to bail out a credit union – it its insolvent it’s mostly because of poor governance and management. In almost all cases in other countries insolvent credit unions are merged or closed.
Is the ILCU plan [broken link removed] or a case of a delusional trade body ?
Kaplan
It’s a plan that would see it supervise credit unions for compliance with prudential standards. It wants to spin its small solvency support fund into a wholly owned subsidiary that would set standards, monitor them and act to sort out insolvent credit unions. ILCU has also demanded that regulation of credit unions be switched from the Central Bank to the Department for Trade Enterprise and Employment as it says some volunteers thought the current regulator was over-zealous.
Solvency support funds, called stablisation, are used to provide temporary solvency to an insolvent credit unions providing they can demonstrate a viable work out plan. But and the big but is this should only be done where it is cheaper to closing them down or merging them. Cheaper means that savers funds are best protected and the guarantee doesn’t have to be called on. Stabilisation is rarely used to bail out a credit union – it its insolvent it’s mostly because of poor governance and management. In almost all cases in other countries insolvent credit unions are merged or closed.
Is the ILCU plan [broken link removed] or a case of a delusional trade body ?
Kaplan