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Monetary Policy

Comment: Views on King's gambit

Here is a roundup comments on the Bank of England's publication of the minutes of the latest MPC meeting, which revealed that, for the first time in the committee's history, the governor voted with the minority (see yesterday's CentralBankNet).

Argentina rebuilds

A re-equipped central bank is able to tackle mounting inflationary pressures in Argentina as the economy prospers, explains Martin redrado

Kansas Fed Paper on inflation targeters

The Kansas Fed Working Paper "Do we really know how inflation targeters set interest rates?" published July 2005 says under inflation targeting regimes other objectives that possibly conflict with the inflation goal are present.

A punch bowl made in China

China is supplying a punch bowl to keep the party going despite the Federal Reserve's best efforts, according to an article published on Wednesday 10 August. So consumers can thank Beijing and other Asian central banks for all the cheap credit, it says.

IMF letter on prospects for ECB rate cut

In a letter published by the Financial Times on Tuesday 9 August, Michael Deppler of the IMF said international developments suggest that the worst may be over on growth in the eurozone but point to further upward pressure on headline inflation because…

COMMENT BY CENTRALBANKNET

The fear that demand in many leading economies has been sustained only by a housing and real estate "bubble" is often seen as one of the biggest risks facing monetary policymakers.

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…

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.

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