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HOT: » Assessing the Legacy of Bulgaria's "Denkov" Cabinet: Achievements, Failures, and What Comes Next
SOFIA, July 18 (Reuters) - Bulgaria will formally apply on Wednesday to join the European Union’s banking union as part of its bid to enter the “waiting room” for euro zone membership, the Black Sea state’s finance minister said.
The euro zone’s finance ministers and the European Central Bank have already given Bulgaria the green light for the move and for its plans to adopt the euro.
Finance Minister Vladislav Goranov, who was authorised by the government to send a request for close cooperation with the ECB, said the official letter would be sent “in a few hours”.
Sofia has made a number of commitments, including cooperating with the ECB so that next July it can join both the banking union and the ERM-2, the two-year obligatory precursor mechanism to joining the euro.
With low inflation, budget surpluses and low public debt, Bulgaria, which has pegged its lev currency to the euro for decades, meets the nominal criteria for adopting the single currency.
But it is also one of the EU’s poorest and most corrupt member states, and its low income levels and the impact that a legacy of graft may have on the stability of its banks has promoted EU officials to slow Bulgaria’s pace to joining the euro.
Bulgaria is the first non-euro zone member state that is seeking to enter into close cooperation with the ECB and join the banking union that will allow ECB to monitor its top lenders.
The ECB is expected to carry out an asset quality review and stress tests on the country’s banks before it gives its nod for entry in a process that may take a year, but could be longer, depending on Bulgaria’s progress.
Bulgaria’s overall financial system has stabilised since the collapse of its fourth largest lender in 2014, which triggered the worst financial crisis in the country since the 1990s and undermined trust in its banking supervision.
Bulgaria has pledged to take more action to combat corruption and organised crime, strengthen supervision of pension funds and insurers and step up anti-money laundering measures. (Reporting by Tsvetelia Tsolova and Angel Krasimirov; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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