Monetary Policy

Bank of Japan warns on loosening monetary policy

JAPAN - Masaru Hayami, governor of the Bank of Japan, warned yesterday that loosening monetary policy could trigger hyperinflation, highlighting the growing gap between the Bank of Japan's thinking and that of the government and many private sector…

Speech by Sirkka Hamalainen of the ECB

SPEECH - Speech delivered by Dr. Sirkka Hamalainen, Member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank, 12th Wirtschaftssymposium, "Global Business - Redefining the Challenge", European Business School, Oestrich-Winkel, 5 October.

The Magic's Gone

RESEARCH - A hard look at the data shows that the famous NAIRU Phillips curve does no better at forecasting inflation than a simple look at the past. From 'The Region' published quarterly by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, September 2001.

Rates and price goals in harmony - Hamalainen

GERMANY - European Central Bank executive board member Sirkka Hamalainen said Friday 5 October in a speech that the ECB continues to pursue a "steady-hand" monetary policy, rather than an activist one following the 11 September terrorist attacks in the U…

Triennial Central Bank Survey

RESEARCH - Triennial Central Bank Survey of Foreign Exchange and Derivatives Market Activity 2001 published by the Bank for International Settlements, 9 October.

Bank of England governor positive on UK prospects

UK - Sir Edward George, the governor of the Bank of England, believes the 11 September attacks on the US have not had a great effect on Britain's domestic economy and he has suggested they may have only a short-term effect on the world economy.

CBR no longer responsible for inflation

RUSSIA - On 3 October, the Central Bank of Russia presented the State Duma with the draft of The Basic Guidelines of a Single State Monetary and Credit Policy for 2002, which assumes an annual inflation of between 12% and 14% for next year.

'No prior talks' on emergency interest rate cuts

UK - The world-wide cuts in interest rates in the wake of the terror attacks on New York and Washington was not coordinated in advance, according to a prominent former member of the Bank of England's policy-making Monetary Policy Committee.

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