Central Banks

British inflation dips by record amount

British annual inflation fell to 4.5% in October, down from 5.2% the previous month, on the back of the slump in oil prices. The 0.7 percentage point slide is the biggest since January 1997, when official records began, and since April 1992 based on…

RBA justifies November cut

An attempt to reduce the risk of a sharp weakening of demand was behind the Reserve Bank of Australia's cut in the cash rate by 75 basis points to 5.25%, according to minutes of the November meeting.

INTERVIEW: Charles Wyplosz

Charles Wyplosz, a professor at the Graduate Institute, Geneva, and an occasional consultant to the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, tells CentralBankNews.com why the Fund cannot play a role in regulating the financial system, why the Paulson…

CNB's Singer: inflation to dip in 2009

Headline inflation is expected to drop below the current 3% inflation target in 2009 and to hit the new target of 2%, set for 2010, at the end of next year, said Miroslav Singer, a vice governor of the Czech National Bank.

Economists back Bernanke

Private-sector economists have come out in strong support of Ben Bernanke, the embattled chairman of the Federal Reserves, suggesting that the new Obama administration should reappoint him in January 2010.

Fed's Kohn: macro models wrong

Macroeconomic models used by central banks to inform their monetary-policy decisions are clearly inadequate, admitted Donald Kohn, the vice-chairman of the Federal Reserve.

Bank of England sees deep recession

The Bank of England sharply adjusted its outlook for growth and inflation in the British economy, saying it was "very likely" that the UK was already in a recession that could last until 2010.

Remittances suffer in the wake of turmoil

Remittance flows to developing countries slowed in the third quarter of 2008 and are expected to slow further in 2009 due to the global financial crisis, a new report from the World Bank finds.

Israel's Banking System - Annual Survey 2007

In 2007, the net income of Israel's five major banking groups rose, despite losses on asset-backed securities, and capital-adequacy ratios reached a record-high of 11% by the end of the year, the Bank of Israel's annual survey of its domestic banking…

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