ECB urges stronger EU powers on money laundering, governments cautious

Reuters  |  LUXEMBOURG 

(Reuters) - The needs clearer rules against that would apply equally to all EU countries, said on Tuesday, but several governments, including Germany, urged caution.

The 28-nation bloc is grappling with a string of high-profile cases of at banks in several member states, including Estonia, Denmark, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and

"A higher level of harmonisation of the applicable rules in the form of a regulation should be considered", de Guindos told EU during a public debate in

An EU regulation is directly applicable in all EU countries, but EU rules against are currently defined in directives which give governments broad leeway in their application. This has resulted in different levels of enforcement and gaps in the EU framework.

However, EU governments have long been reluctant to give away national powers to monitor banks and fight crime.

Many of them confirmed on Tuesday their scepticism to de Guindos's appeal and to a European Commission's plan to slightly strengthen common supervision against money laundering.

Germany, the largest country of the bloc, asked for more time in changing the current framework.

Replying to de Guindos's proposal on transforming directives into a regulation, Joerg Kukies, Germany's state secretary at the said: "We think this is not an easy thing to do in the short term but something we would be very open to discuss".

The Netherlands, Luxembourg, and said more time was needed to decide on which changes would be needed, confirming the sceptical line they held in closed-door meetings.

opposed any proposal that would reduce national powers.

(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; editing by Philip Blenkinsop)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, October 02 2018. 15:19 IST