By Francesco Canepa and Giuseppe Fonte
FRANKFURT (Reuters) -The European Central Bank (ECB) on Wednesday criticised the Italian government’s proposed tax on windfall bank profits, saying it did not consider lenders’ long-term prospects and could make some of them vulnerable to an economic downturn.
Last month, Rome dealt a surprise blow to the country’s lenders by imposing a one-off 40% tax on their profits resulting from higher interest rates, after reprimanding them for failing to reward deposits.
Bank shares tumbled before the economy ministry clarified that the new tax would amount to no more than 0.1% of lenders’ total assets.
“The amount of the extraordinary tax might not be commensurate with the longer-term profitability of a credit institution and its capital generation capacity,” the ECB said in a non-binding opinion assessing the risks to financial stability stemming from Italy’s plan.
“As a result of the general application of the extraordinary tax, credit institutions that have lower solvency positions or are more focused on lending activity (such as small banks) or have challenging capital projections could become less able to absorb the potential downside risks of an economic downturn,” the ECB added.
Frankfurt had already criticised similar taxes previously adopted by other European Union countries such as Spain.
Asked about the ECB’s rebukes, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni defended the plan while opening up to some changes, provided the targeted tax take remained unchanged at “just under” 3 billion euros ($3.22 billion).
“If there are corrections to be made they can be done but I do not want to backtrack,” she said.
Her remarks come as Italian lawmakers are drafting proposals to be unveiled later this week to soften the impact of the tax, including allowing banks to partly deduct what they have to pay from their overall corporate tax bill.
Some amendments are likely to exempt smaller banks from paying the tax or revisit its cap by anchoring it to risk-weighted assets (RWAs) instead of total assets, according to some ruling politicians.
The ECB said it was not fully clear how the calculation of “total assets” would be made and raised the prospect that banks might register losses or lower profits when paying the tax in mid-2024, as envisaged by the government scheme.
It noted that the positive effect on banks from higher interest rates could be offset by lower lending volumes, a higher cost of funding and losses on bad debts if the economy worsens.
“Caution must be taken to ensure that the extraordinary tax does not impact the ability of individual credit institutions to build strong capital bases,” the ECB said.
($1 = 0.9313 euros)
Read the full article here