Central Banking staff
Follow Central Banking
Articles by Central Banking staff
Angola to launch sovereign fund this year
Angola plans to launch a sovereign wealth fund before the end of 2009, Severim de Morais, the country's finance minister, has said.
Swiss ponder new break-up measures
The Swiss National Bank (SNB) is considering ways to possibly break up large banks and wind down some of their business units during difficult times.
Blanchard and Roubini caution on global recovery
The developed world will see a return to positive growth by the end of the year, but sustaining the recovery will be a delicate balancing act, said Olivier Blanchard, the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
RBI's Subbarao dismisses deflation worries
The governor of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has dismissed fears that the country's economy could suffer a prolonged bout of falling prices, saying that there was "no concern of deflation."
Trichet sounds debt warning
Jean-Claude Trichet, the president of the European Central Bank (ECB), has warned that many European governments have reached the ceiling in terms of how much debt they can incur in fighting the recession.
US consents to $100 billion IMF boost
The US Congress on Thursday finally agreed to a $100 billion credit line to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), pledged by President Barack Obama after the G20 meeting in London.
Dublin outlines plans for new regulator
The Irish finance ministry on Thursday published its plans for a new financial regulator, titled the Central Bank of Ireland Commission.
EU central bankers to pick stability board head
The head of the European Central Bank (ECB) will no longer automatically become the head of the proposed European Systemic Risk Board following objections from the United Kingdom, and several central and eastern European countries.
The state of the art of inflation targeting
The Bank of England's Centre for Central Banking Studies has published a new handbook showing the key features of the inflation-targeting frameworks in each of the 26 inflation - targeting central banks around the world.
BIS volume on household debt-policy implications
The Bank for International Settlements has published a volume of speeches and papers delivered at a seminar on the implications of household debt for monetary policy and financial stability, held in March 2008 in Seoul.
IMF's Lipsky: expansionary fiscal policy still key
Fiscal policy in advanced and many emerging-market economies should remain expansionary at least through 2010, said John Lipsky, the first deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund.
Canada to support private liquidity creation
The Bank of Canada, as the ultimate provider of liquidity to the system, is thinking through whether to adapt its facilities to support continuous private liquidity creation, said Mark Carney, the governor of the central bank.
Swiss talk tough on franc appreciation
The Swiss National Bank has warned that it will continue to intervene in currency markets to prevent the appreciation of the franc.
Basel, IADI issue deposit insurance guidelines
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and the International Association of Deposit Insurers (IADI) on Thursday published the final version of their global guidelines for deposit guarantee systems.
King steps up bid for more Bank power
Mervyn King, the governor of the Bank of England, on Wednesday night reiterated calls for the government to grant Threadneedle Street more power to fulfil its new financial stability mandate.
Geithner defends Fed from Congressional attack
Tim Geithner, the US Treasury secretary and a former head of the New York Federal Reserve, backed the Federal Reserve as the best institution to monitor systemic risk after lawmakers queried the central bank's ability to do so.
UAE to improve banks' corporate governance
The Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates published new draft corporate governance guidelines for the banking sector on Thursday, saying that, as leading contributors to the economy, commercial banks had to have high management and corporate…
ECB - Financial Stability Review June 2009
Most large and complex banking groups operating in the euro area appear to have enough capital to withstand severe but plausible stress scenarios, notes the latest Financial Stability Review from the European Central Bank.
Bernanke: bottom-up actions key for recovery
Economic recovery and development is a bottom-up as well as top-down process, said Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve.
Europe's banking fragility needs urgent attention
Europe's banks are so fragile that measures must be implemented within the next 12 months, a paper by Adam Posen and Nicolas Veron, two economists at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, posits.
Iceland shows need for pan-EU supervisory approach
The Icelandic experience in the current crisis shows that the European Union's (EU) arrangements for cross-border banking supervision and deposit insurance need urgent strengthening, a new paper from Robert Wade, a professor of political economy at the…
Reserves good insurance for emerging markets
Accumulating foreign-exchange reserves remains "pretty good insurance" for emerging markets, new research from Deutsche Bank posits.
Chile to keep rates at record low until mid 2010
The Central Bank of Chile has indicated that, contrary to market expectations, it is likely to keep rates at a record low of 0.75% until at least the middle of next year.
Norges Bank to tweet rate decisions
Norges Bank has begun using twitter, the social networking site, to communicate rate decisions.