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Monetary Policy

Kosovo to establish a central bank

Economy and Finance Minister Haki Shatri told KosovaLive website that UNMIK (UN Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo) and the government finally have agreed that Banking and Payment Authority of Kosova will become the Central Bank of Kosova.

The pact’s last stand

Political tensions have been contained by the deal on deficits, but at what cost to Europe’s fiscal regime and its single currency? William Clarke reports from Brussels.

BoE's Tucker reappointed to MPC

Paul Tucker, Executive Director for Markets at the Bank of England, has been reappointed for a further three-year term as a member of the Monetary Policy Committee with effect from 1 June 2005.

Interview with RBI's Reddy

In an interview published on Wednesday 18 May Reserve Bank of India Governor Yaga Venugopal Reddy said any revaluation of the Chinese yuan will have less of an impact on India than other Asian countries.

Greenspan could stay on longer at Fed

The US administration of George W. Bush is considering whether to encourage Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan to stay for at least a few months beyond the 31 Jan expiration of his term, the Washington Post reported this week.

Fed's Gramlich resigns to pursue teaching

Edward Gramlich submitted his resignation Wednesday 18 May as a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, effective 31 August. Gramlich is resigning to pursue several teaching and research interests.

Mervyn King and the invisible hand

Bank of England governor Mervyn King delivered a speech this week in which he revealed his "Maradona theory of interest rates" based on the Argentine legend's second goal against England in the 1986 World Cup quarter-final.

Fed's Kohn on modeling inflation

In a speech on 'Modeling inflation: A policymaker's perspective' given on 20 May, Donald Kohn of the Federal Reserve called for improvements in inflation modeling, saying an increase in core US inflation in 2004 and 2005 caught him and many other…

BoJ's Fukui says board split 7-2 on target cut

Bank of Japan governor Toshihiko Fukui said on Friday 20 May that the BoJ's policy board vote was spilt 7-2 on maintaining the liquidity target at 30-35 trln yen. "Two members thought the target ought to be lowered," Fukui told a press conference.

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