Standard SQL:
SELECT t1.bla, t1.id, t1.counter, t2.counter
FROM (SELECT t1.bla, t1.id, COUNT(counted_data_from_t1) AS counter
FROM t1
GROUP BY t1.bla, t1.id
) AS t1
JOIN (SELECT t2.id, COUNT(counted_data_from_t2) AS counter
FROM t2
GROUP BY t2.id
) AS t2
ON t1.id = t2.id AND t1.counter = t2.counter
Oracle SQL (because Oracle doesn't like AS before table aliases):
SELECT t1.bla, t1.id, t1.counter, t2.counter
FROM (SELECT t1.bla, t1.id, COUNT(counted_data_from_t1) AS counter
FROM t1
GROUP BY t1.bla, t1.id
) t1
JOIN (SELECT t2.id, COUNT(counted_data_from_t2) AS counter
FROM t2
GROUP BY t2.id
) t2
ON t1.id = t2.id AND t1.counter = t2.counter
You just have to decide where bla comes from; I nominated t1. I'm assuming that for any given value of t1.id, there is a single value of t1.bla. If there isn't, then you need to explain much more clearly what you're counting and where the various columns are, and what the keys of the tables are.
Update: Apologies for not noticing the Oracle tag and giving invalid Oracle syntax.