Monetary Policy
The future of EMU: one size fits none?
According to the forthcoming edition of Central Banking, inflation and output gap differentials have grown between European states since the inception of the EMU in 1999. If these continue to worsen, the resulting tensions would put a big strain on…
Bank of England reduces rates by 0.25%
The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee voted on Thursday 4 August to reduce the Bank's repo rate by 0.25 percentage points to 4.5%.
Costello says RBA decision reflects solid growth
Treasurer Peter Costello said the Reserve Bank of Australia's decision to leave interest rates at 5.5 per cent after its monthly board meeting on Wednesday 3 August reflects continuing solid economic growth in the country.
Bank of England set to cut interest rates
The Bank of England is widely expected to reduce UK interest rates when it concludes its 100th Monetary Policy Committee meeting on Thursday 4 August.
RBNZ leaves OCR unchanged at 6.75 per cent
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand left the Official Cash Rate unchanged at 6.75 per cent on Thursday 28 July. Governor Alan Bollard said short-term inflation pressures have recently emerged as a result of surging oil prices.
Germany's Clement says ECB rate cut overdue
German Economy Minister Wolfgang Clement has criticised the European Central Bank for failing to give the region's economy a boost by cutting rates at a time when conditions would have been more easily able to cope with relaxation of monetary policy.
Monetary policy predictability in the euro area
The ECB Working Paper "Monetary policy predictability in the euro area: an international comparison" published Thursday evaluates the ability of market participants to anticipate monetary policy decisions in the euro area and in 13 other countries.
Fed's Kohn on monetary policy perspectives
In the speech 'Monetary policy perspectives on risk premiums in financial markets' given on 21 July Donald Kohn of the Federal Reserve said that greater transparency at the U.S. central bank may have led to less uncertainty in financial markets and…
Federal Reserve's Monetary Policy Report, Jul 2005
The Federal Reserve published its July 2005 Monetary Policy Report to the Congress on Wednesday 20 July. The U.S. economy continued to expand at a solid pace over the first half of 2005 despite the restraint imposed on aggregate demand by a further rise…
Bank of England MPC Minutes, 6 & 7 July
The minutes from the 6 & 7 July meeting of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee published on Wednesday 20 July showed policy makers voted 5-4 to leave its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 4.75%.
Greenspan signals more rate rises ahead
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said on Wednesday 20 July that the U.S. growth outlook was solid and the Fed should keep raising interest rates.
RBI technical committee holds first meeting
The first meeting of the Technical Advisory Committee on Monetary Policy was held on Tuesday 19 July at the Reserve Bank of India, Central Office, Mumbai.
Bank of Japan Policy Board Minutes
The Bank of Japan published the minutes from its 14 and 15 June Monetary Policy Meeting on 18 July. The minutes showed the board voted down in mid-June two proposals to cut its liquidity target, including one proposal to reduce it to just 25 trln yen.
SARB's Guma on the outlook for monetary policy
In the speech 'The outlook for monetary policy' given on 22 June, Dr XP Guma of the South African Reserve Bank said as the formulator and transmitter of monetary policy the central bank needs to communicate its basic objectives, its strategy for…
Luxembourg's Mersch indicates unchanged ECB rate
European Central Bank Governing Council member and Luxembourg central bank president Yves Mersch indicated in an interview the ECB will keep its key rates unchanged despite higher oil prices.
Austria's Grasser says ECB criticism unhelpful
Austrian Finance Minister Karl-Heinz Grasser said in an interview that criticism of the European Central Bank by some eurozone countries is diverting attention away from Europe's real economic problems.
Fed's Yellen says higher rates make sense
It makes sense for the Federal Reserve to keep lifting U.S. interest rates as long as certain assumptions are met, San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen said in an article in International Economy magazine.
Atlanta Fed appoints assistant vice president
Brian Bowling has been appointed assistant vice president in the supervision and regulation division at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Jack Guynn, president and chief executive officer of the Atlanta Fed announced on 5 July.
Interview with World Bank's Wolfowitz
In an interview published on Monday 11 July World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz said the multilateral lender wants to help foster discussion among industrialized nations and emerging market countries such as China and India on tackling global warming.
W.House may want business experience for Fed chair
An article published this week says the White House may want to look towards the business community for a successor to Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan. None of the three potential heirs usually named as possibles to fill Greenspan's shoes meets…
PBOC deputy governor Li steps down
Li Ruogu has stepped down as deputy governor of China's central bank, Xinhua reported this week, citing the State Council.
Bank of Canada Monetary Policy Report Update
The Bank of Canada released its July Monetary Policy Report Update on 15 July. The Bank said it expects Canada's economy to grow by about 2.7 per cent in 2005 and 3.3 per cent in 2006.
Gonzalez-Paramo on outlook for financial stability
In the speech 'The outlook for financial stability in the euro area' given on 14 July, Jose Manuel Gonzalez-Paramo of the ECB said there is still a risk of a disruptive correction of the large US current account deficit.
Fed's Santomero on a consumer-driven expansion
In the speech 'The implications of a consumer-driven expansion' given on 13 July, Anthony Santomero of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia said the Federal Reserve is likely to continue tightening monetary policy at a measured pace, but it depends…