【单选题】
{{B}}Single, but not level{{/B}} The 1992 programme is going to run a bit late for theEuropeanCommunity’s financial services companies. The earliest that the whole -- more or less -- of the industry will be able to take advantage of its single market now looks like being mid - 1994. That is theEuropeanCommission’s unstated timetable forEC、member countries to implement its third life - insurance directive, whose draft is published on February 20th. The directive, which follows similar directive on non -life insurance published in draft a few months ago, is the last big element in its push to open financial markets that are still highly protecteD、 The broad idea is that financial service companies should have the right to operate through- out theEC、on the basis of a single "passport", issued by the supervisory authority in their home country. The commission hoped to have the main insurance - all liberalised together at the end of 1992. Now it looks as if only the banking directive, adopted by theCouncil of Ministers inDecember 1989, will be operative in time. A、draft investment services directive was submitted by the commission to the council in January 1989, and is much further along the legislative road than the two insurance directives. Yet the obstacles that it has run into make it probable that even it will miss the end - 1992 deadline. The directive would let investment banks and stockbrokers serve clients throughout theEC、and trade on allEC、exchanges, subjected only to home - country control. Problems arose last November, when France proposed to curb their freedom to trade securities outside recognised exchanges. This has split theEC、into the usual north/south, liberal/interventionist groups. The 12 finance ministers will try again on February 25th, but progress is unlikely. Eventually, a compromise will no doubt be reached, probably one saying that small investors should have their orders executed on official markets unless they want otherwise.But all this will take time to negotiate. The council is unlikely to adopt the directive formally much before the end of this year. Governments will then be hard put to get it on to their national statute books by mid-1993. Do the delays in the investment services and insurance directives matter TheEC、is adept at missed deadlines, and end - 1992 was never carved in stone. The trouble is that banks, investment houses and insurers are now in competition with each other.Banks therefore will have a head start over their non - banking rivals in selling competitive products across theEC、Instead of the single, level playing field for financial services that theCommunity talks of, the field will indeed be single but still sloping from one end to the other. Senior commission officials say that it is up to national governments to get a move on. This is wishful thinking. On February 19th theBritish government began consulting with interested parties on last autumn’s non -life -insurance draft directive. This process will take months to complete, and only then, say theBritish, will they be able to begin serious negotiations in theCouncil of Ministers. The draft life directive, while sharing some principles with the non-life draft, also poses new problems that will take time to resolve. These concerns such issues as consumer protection (that is, disclosure, supervision and so on), calculating technical provisions to meet insurers’ liabilities, and the removal of certain national provisions likeBelgium’s ban on life - insurance policies linked to unit trusts. |
网考网参考答案:B
网考网解析:
暂无解析 document.getElementById("warp").style.display="none"; document.getElementById("content").style.display="block"; 查看试题解析出处>>
发布评论 查看全部评论