Economics
We'll make the banks lend: King
Mervyn King, the governor of the Bank of England, on Tuesday indicated that the British authorities would take drastic action if banks continued to curtail lending.
EBRD gives gloomy outlook on eastern Europe
Growth is set to falter across most of central and eastern Europe next year, with two of the three Baltic states likely to contract, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), said on Tuesday.
Canadian deputy resigns
Sheryl Kennedy, a deputy governor at the Bank of Canada, is to leave the central bank next week.
Interview: Stanley Fischer
Stanley Fischer, the governor of the Bank of Israel, tells CentralBanking.com about his work at the central bank, the impact of the crisis on central banking and why the International Monetary Fund is the right organisation to facilitate the reform of…
Fed's Warsh mooted as Geithner's successor
Kevin Warsh, a governor of the Federal Reserve, has been tipped to succeed Tim Geithner at the helm of the New York Fed.
Bermuda Monetary Authority - Annual Report 2007
Last year saw the Bermuda Monetary Authority introduce a new enterprise risk management framework, the institution notes in its latest Annual Report.
The US deficit and the weak dollar puzzle
A paper from the International Monetary Fund investigates how the US current account deficit could remain large despite the depreciation of the dollar.
Bank of Canada - Autumn Review
The Autumn issue of the Bank of Canada Review examines how structural factors and developments affect the economic performance of an advanced economy such as Canada.
FOMC members see US contraction next year
Almost a third of the members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) see the US economy shrinking in 2009, the rate-setting board's latest economic projections reveal.
UK houses price to fall: Fed
House prices in the United Kingdom will fall considerably in the near- to medium-term, finds a new paper from the Federal Reserve Board.
Boston Fed covers global imbalances
The Boston Federal Reserve has published a new e-book on global imbalances.
France's Noyer calls for exchange-rate flexibility
The unwinding of global imbalances requires greater flexibility from countries with large current account surpluses and fixed exchange rates, said Christian Noyer, the governor of Banque de France.
ECB got it wrong on de-coupling: ex-research head
The European Central Bank was wrong to think the eurozone economies could defy the past and avoid the ill-effects of a recession in the United States, its former head of research has said.
Japan slides into recession, lends IMF $100bn
Japan's economy shrank by 0.4% in the third quarter, surprising analysts who had predicted the country to narrowly avoid a technical recession and grow by 0.1%.
G20 earns plaudits but fails to ease market mood
Markets were nonplussed by the G20 communique with most of the leading stock indices falling in Monday trading.
Renminbi going global - HKMA's Pang
The renminbi could in time become a significant currency for global trade, Peter Pang, a deputy chief executive at the Hong Kong Monetary Authority.
IMF lending has political bias
A paper from the European Central Bank shows that geopolitical considerations are an important factor in shaping International Monetary Fund's lending.
Bernanke "ready to take additional steps"
Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, says policymakers around the world will remain in close contact as "challenges remain for the global economy."
Eurozone in recession
The eurozone is in recession following the release of official statistics on Friday that showed that its economy contracted for the second quarter in a row.
Crisis myths true - Boston's reply to Minneapolis
A new paper from the Boston Federal Reserves takes issue with a recent paper from the Minneapolis Fed's that found four widely-held beliefs about the financial crisis of 2008 to be false.
Oil prices, fiscal policy and business cycle
In countries with a large oil sector relative to the rest of the economy, oil price changes affect the economic cycle through fiscal policy, finds a new paper from the International Monetary Fund.
El-Erian sees "very bumpy road" ahead
Mohamed El-Erian, one of the world's most successful investors and a former deputy director at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), says the current crisis underlines the fact the infrastructure did not support the activities taking place in financial…
SWF growth to slow
Stephen Jen, an economist at Morgan Stanley, has adjusted downward his estimate of the growth of sovereign wealth funds in the coming years.
EMU reduces domestic political shocks impact
Economic and monetary union (EMU) has helped reduce the impact of political shocks on the economy of member states, finds a new paper from the European Central Bank.