Monetary Policy
Governors matter - new paper
This new working paper from the Peterson Institute for International Economics looks at whether or not monetary policy expectations are affected by the appointment of a new central bank governor.
Fed's Lacker: core inflation still too high
Jeffrey Lacker, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, said on 22 May that core inflation was still too high and rising expectations of future price pressures was a source of concern.
Riksbank board divided on rate hold decision
The Swedish Riksbank's monetary policy meeting was divided in its recent decision to leave the rate unchanged, according to reports.
SARB Monetary Policy Review, May 2007
The South African Reserve Bank published its Monetary Policy Review for May 2007 on Tuesday 15 May. South Africa's targeted inflation should remain within its range, but the target could be threatened by adverse developments and a poor response to past…
Danmarks Nationalbank, Monetary Review 1st Q 2007
The Danmarks Nationalbank's Monetary Review for the First Quarter 2007 says the strong upswing in the Danish economy has continued unabated.
Norway's Gjedrem on the conduct of monetary policy
In the speech 'The conduct of monetary policy' given on 10 May Svein Gjedrem of Norges Bank said the fall in prices for imported goods and services and the increase in export prices have provided the Norwegian economy with an appreciable income boost.
It's all down to Bollard to beat NZ's bubble now
According to this article published by The National Business Review on Friday 11 May, politicians have failed to do anything to rein in New Zealand's property boom, leaving it all up to Reserve Bank governor Alan Bollard.
Fukui on the outlook for Japan's economy
In the speech 'The outlook for Japan's economy and the conduct of monetary policy' given on 10 May Toshihiko Fukui of the Bank of Japan said the Bank will continue to explain carefully to the public its assessment of economic activity and prices and its…
Sweden's Rosenberg: Monetary policy communication
In the speech 'Changes in monetary policy communication' given on 11 May Irma Rosenberg of the Sveriges Riksbank described some changes in the communication of monetary policy, which were decided at the Executive Board meeting held on 10 May.
Code words not for King, but BoE can improve
According to this article published Thursday 10 May by Reuters, the gloss is starting to come off the Bank of England's reputation for managing interest rate expectations and keeping inflation under control.
NBH minutes show one member wanted rate cut
A single rate-setter on Hungary's 13-member Monetary Council voted in favour of a 25-basis-point rate cut at the MPC's 23 April policy meeting, the minutes published Friday 11 may showed. Changes to the Central bank Act will see a reduction in the number…
FOMC can stick again unless data changes
Without changes in economic data, the Federal Open Market Committee can leave US interest rates alone next month too, and may as well issue the same statement too, says John Berry of Bloomberg in this article published Thursday 10 May.
Trichet signals June rate rise with 'vigilance'
European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet told the ECB's press conference Thursday 10 May that ``strong vigilance'' is required to contain inflation. A hint that interest rates will rise at the next meeting.
BoJ's Fukui says low rates for too long will hurt
Bank of Japan governor Toshihiko Fukui told a seminar in Tokyo Thursday 10 May that interest rates need to rise gradually despite Japanese prices responding slowly to strong global demand.
Fed hold rates but concerned on inflation
The Federal Reserve left US interest rates unchanged Wednesday 9 May and acknowledged that the economy is slowing.
PBOC says credit growth still too high
The People's Bank of China said in its first quarter monetary policy report, published Thursday 10 May, that credit growth remains too high and it needs to maintain a reasonable level of expansion.
King and Co should do nothing either
According to this article from Bloomberg published Wednesday 9 May, there are plenty of reasons for the Bank of England to do nothing Thursday.
Bernanke and Co should do nothing
According to this article from John Berry at Bloomberg, published Friday 4 May, Federal Reserve officials will not change interest rates Wednesday amid conflicting evidence about where the US economy is headed.
Some BoJ members urged gradual rate hike
Minutes released Monday 7 May showed some members of the Bank of Japan's board called on the BoJ to do a better job communicating its intention of raising interest rates only gradually and without any timetable set in advance.
RBA Statement on Monetary Policy, May 2007
The Reserve Bank of Australia published its May 2007 Statement on Monetary Policy on 4 May. In the report the RBA said risks to inflation are broadly balanced with underlying inflation expected to fall back to around 2.5% in the next few quarters.
Riksbank leaves rates unchanged at 3.25%
Sweden's Riksbank said Friday 4 May it would leave its key interest rate unchanged at 3.25% but said the rate should be raised gradually in the future and by more than the 0.25% it forecast in February.
Bank of England has much to discuss next week
With the Bank of England looking certain to raise UK interest rates next week, this article from Reuters, published Friday 4 May, looks at the main factors the MPC will be discussing.
Stock exchange chief urges BoT to cut rates
According to the head of Thailand's stock exchange, the central bank should cut interest rates faster to spur sluggish domestic spending and the flagging economy.
BoE's King on the MPC ten years on
In the speech 'The MPC ten years on' given on 2 May Mervyn King of the Bank of England said since its inception the MPC has kept inflation expectations well anchored and is determined to keep doing so.