Monetary Policy
The emergence of principles-based policy
The Swiss National Bank has published a paper reviewing what it describes as the success of its principles-based approach to monetary policy.
Japan holds rates for now
The Bank of Japan's monetary policy board voted 8-1 in favour of keeping the overnight call rate at about 0.5%.
Svensson defends publication of rate path
Lars Svensson, the deputy governor of Sweden's Riksbank, said the central bank had decided to publish an interest rate path because it was impossible to forecast inflation and resource allocation without having an assumption for the interest rate path.
Bank of Zambia - Annual Report 2005
The Zambian economy recorded 5% growth in 2005, with manufacturing and tourism making the most appreciable contributions, in-spite of adverse developments in the oil industry that threatened economic activity.
Polish MPC member says rate hike can wait
Stanislaw Owsiak, a member of the National Bank of Poland's monetary policy council (MPC), said July data indicated an August interest rate rise may not be necessary.
China makes two rate hikes to cool inflation
The People's Bank of China increased its benchmark rate by 18 basis points to 7.02% and its deposit rate by 27 basis points to 3.6% in an effort to stabilise inflationary pressures.
Bank Al Maghrib - Annual Report 2006
The Bank Al Maghrib, the Moroccan central bank, said "growth reached a rate rarely seen in the past" in 2006.
Bundesbank posts upbeat forecast
The Bundesbank has said that German economy has continued to grow, following a strong first quarter.
Czech deputy sees "significant" rate rise
The Czech central bank should raise rates "significantly" to keep inflation on target, says Ludek Niedermayer, the Czech central bank's deputy governor.
Poole replaced on Fed policy vote
In a surprise development, William Poole, the president of the St Louis Federal Reserve, did not vote on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) policy announcement on recent market volatility.
The costs of being wrong about policy lags
This paper from an economist at the University of Oregon examines the losses associated with conducting monetary policy.
Bank of Estonia - Annual Report 2006
Estonia is highly unlikely to meet the Maastricht inflation criterion in 2007-09, notes the governor of Estonia's central bank in the annual report for 2006, but "we should maintain readiness to adopt the euro at the first opportunity," he says.
Bank of Canada Review - Summer 2007
The central bank's quarterly publication features three articles on labour supply, productivity and competition in the banking sector, respectively.
Only 'calamity' justifies rate hike - Fed's Poole
William Poole, the president of the St Louis Federal Reserve, said the US economy may weather subprime woes and that only a "calamity" would lead to a rate cut before the next Federal Reserve meeting on 18 September.
South African Reserve Bank raises rates by 0.5%
The South African Reserve Bank has hiked rates to 10% to combat rising inflation.
Turkey holds rates
The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey decided to keep its short-term interest rates unchanged on Tuesday.
Norway raises rates to 4.75%
The Central Bank of Norway has increased its key policy rate by 0.25% to 4.75%, despite acknowledging recent market turmoil.
Polish rates to rise soon
Halina Wasilewska-Trenkner, a monetary policy committee member at the National Bank of Poland, says interest rates will rise in either August or September this year.
BoE's MPC all agreed to hold rates
Minutes of this month's meeting at the Bank of England revealed all nine members of the monetary policy committee were in favour of this month's rate hold.
Riksbank deputy discusses monetary policy
Barbro Wickman-Parak, the deputy governor of the Riksbank, gave her views on June's rate rise at a meeting held at the Stockholm office of Swedbank, a commercial bank.
UK inflation stats lower chances of rate hike
The UK's inflation rate has fallen below its target 2% rate for the first time in 15 months, fuelling speculation that interest rates have peaked at 5.75%.
NZ finance minister knocks CB migration plans
Michael Cullen, New Zealand's finance minister, criticised the Reserve Bank of New Zealand's proposal to limit immigration in order to curb rising house prices in parliament today.
Inflation will remain low - Taiwan governor
Perng Fai-nan, the governor of the Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan), said that central bank strategy had ensured inflation remained low and stable, and that it would continue to do so.
Trichet answers back on inflation and jobs
Jean-Claude Trichet responded to criticisms that the euro hampers employment in an interview published 11 August.