Analysis-EU takes small steps in uphill struggle to wean savers off cash
By Valentina Za and Jesús Aguado
MILAN/MADRID, Dec 2 (Reuters) – A decade after it began working on a capital markets union, the EU is still struggling to agree a framework that encourages savers to put their cash to work within the bloc rather than in the U.S., prompting some of its 27 members to go it alone.
After warning in a 2024 report that 300 billion euros ($349 billion) of European Union savings leave the region annually, former Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta last month said that ploughing funds into U.S. firms that reinvest in Europe was “a kind of collective suicide” caused by continued fragmentation.
Despite more than 60 legislative proposals since 2015, national interests, technical complexity and shifting political priorities have hindered progress on market integration, a European Central Bank (ECB) study said in May.
A new package is due to be presented on Wednesday.
In the five years since the EU’s latest action plan, households have stashed away 15% more in cash and bank deposits, raising the total to 12.1 trillion euros, equivalent to roughly 30% of their wealth, while in the U.S. just 11% sits in cash.
And in the euro zone’s biggest and most populous economy the figure is higher still. Germans hold more than 40% of their financial assets in cash or bank deposits and only 12% in equities, its Council on Foreign Relations said last year.
‘FINANCE EUROPE’ LABEL TO HELP SAVERS
Seven countries, led by Spain, have started a pilot project that includes a proposed ‘Finance Europe’ label to help savers select investment products that back EU firms.
After identifying which instruments qualify, countries will assess whether regulations need tweaking and consult the private sector to gauge demand, officials told Reuters.
The plan is moving more slowly than expected, but Madrid could make an announcement early in 2026, one said.
Meanwhile, think tanks in Italy, France, Germany and Spain have proposed scaling Italy’s Savings Investment Plan (PIR), which succeeded in funnelling residents’ savings into the local economy, to the EU level.
Launched in 2017, the scheme raised 21 billion euros in its first five years, the minimum holding period required to qualify for tax exemptions, provided 70% of assets are invested in Italian companies.
“Instead of 70% in one member state’s economy, it would be the EU economy, perhaps with a small fraction still reserved for domestic investments,” said Fabrizio Pagani, a former Italian finance ministry official who designed PIR and is working on a similar EU-wide initiative.

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