Adina Akbik

Senior Assistant Professor of European Politics

Contesting the European Central Bank in Banking Supervision: Accountability in Practice at the European Parliament


Journal article


Adina Maricut‐Akbik
Journal of Common Market Studies, 2020

DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Maricut‐Akbik, A. (2020). Contesting the European Central Bank in Banking Supervision: Accountability in Practice at the European Parliament. Journal of Common Market Studies.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Maricut‐Akbik, Adina. “Contesting the European Central Bank in Banking Supervision: Accountability in Practice at the European Parliament.” Journal of Common Market Studies (2020).


MLA   Click to copy
Maricut‐Akbik, Adina. “Contesting the European Central Bank in Banking Supervision: Accountability in Practice at the European Parliament.” Journal of Common Market Studies, 2020.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{adina2020a,
  title = {Contesting the European Central Bank in Banking Supervision: Accountability in Practice at the European Parliament},
  year = {2020},
  journal = {Journal of Common Market Studies},
  author = {Maricut‐Akbik, Adina}
}

Abstract

The establishment of the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) raised expectations regarding the ability of the European Parliament (EP) to hold the European Central Bank (ECB) accountable for its decisions. This article examines the accountability interactions between the two institutions in the first years of the functioning of the SSM (2013-18). The focus is on the extent to which the EP contests ECB supervisory decisions in practice through letters and public hearings. The analysis shows a frequently-used infrastructure of political accountability that is however limited in ensuring the contestation of ECB conduct in banking supervision. The study identifies problems with the performance of the EP as an accountability forum and with the tight confidentiality rules of the SSM, which allow the ECB to silence contestation on many politically salient issues. The findings are based on an innovative analytical framework on the study of accountability interactions.


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