Central Banking Journal - Volume XXV Number 4
Articles in this issue
Radical rethink of central banking is still possible
Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz's call for central banking to be "reinvented" is a timely reminder that others need to heed
Jacques de Larosière on the international monetary system and the euro
Christopher Jeffery speaks to former IMF managing director Jacques de Larosière about continuing efforts to restore the global financial system and where the future now lies for Europe
Andrew Sheng: The new politics of central banking
Extraordinary policy actions by the world’s leading central banks have left them politicised and entangled in an increasingly awkward operating environment
Former IMF chief weighs up benefits and costs of QE
Quantitative easing is having a profound effect on markets and banking. Jacques de Larosière weighs up some of the benefits and costs of QE
Five problems with floating rate exchange regimes
Robert Aliber bemoans the dangers of sharp moves in major currencies that are the result of floating rate currency regimes, and answers five rhetorical questions related to monetary stability
Shadow banking risks ebbing in China
China has the world’s third-largest shadow-banking sector, but the risks it poses to the overall financial system are overstated, especially following moves by the State Council
The MPC process in light of the Warsh Review
The Bank of England’s revised MPC meeting schedule has some merits but will not add to transparency and raises the risk of news shocks, writes former member Charles Goodhart
In qualified support of coco bonds
Europe’s supervisors need to develop a code of best practice to support the prudential issuance of contingent convertible bonds, argues Andreas Dombret
Devising effective data strategies to help inform policy decisions
The publication of the Irving Fisher Committee’s report on good data practices offers the potential for powerful data sharing, but more work needs to be done at the tactical and practical levels
Interview: Manuel Sánchez on shifting financial stability risks
Bank of Mexico deputy governor speaks about monetary policy normalisation in the US, the limits of macro-prudential tools and developing capital markets
Central banks face weight of expectations in sub-Saharan Africa
The art of central banking has changed dramatically in frontier markets. Monetary policy, financial regulation, capital flows and exchange rate are now centre stage, writes Louis Kasekende
Assessing the value of financial stability reports
More than 90 central banks now produce financial stability reports. Emrah Uslu and Eyup Kahveci look at the various approaches they take as well as appraising their usefulness.
Central bank liquidity surge is not without historical precedent
Major central banks have injected $14 trillion of liquidity into the global economic system, but such surges are not without historical precedent
Book notes: Hall of mirrors, by Barry Eichengreen
A scholarly, but readable narrative that interleaves an account of the build-up to and course of the Great Depression with the similar course of events in the Global Financial Crisis
Book notes: Monetary policy and financial repression in Britain 1951–1959, by William A Allen
A fascinating and coherent account of British monetary policy in the 1950s
Book notes: The media and financial crises, by Steve Schifferes and Richard Roberts
A fascinating book, which gives a very different perspective on the financial crisis and its predecessors
Book notes: Smart Money, by Andrew Palmer
An important attempt to show how financial innovation is “reshaping our world for the better” all the more important