Central Banks

Gerashchenko's appeal fails

Russia's Supreme Court rejected an appeal from former central bank chairman Viktor Gerashchenko on Friday 6 February over refusal by the Central Electoral Commission to register him a candidate in the upcoming presidential election.

BOK governor to attend BIS meeting

Bank of Korea Governor Park Seung plans to leave for Hong Kong on Sunday 8 February to attend the Asian Central Bank Governors' Meeting held by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS).

Waring begins RNBZ role

With a Christmas delivery of bulk reports and background material, Professor Marilyn Waring has unofficially started her appointment to the board of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, reported Massey University's 'Massey News'.

Fed's changes to payments system risk statement

The Federal Reserve Board on Thursday 5 February announced that, beginning in July 2006, it will require Reserve Banks to release interest and redemption payments on securities issued by government-sponsored enterprises and international organizations.

Focus on central banks

This article looks at some key events this week in the world of central banking. Ben Bernanke's comments on inflation ruffled some feathers, the author says, with the suggestion that deflation fears had receded substantially. The ECB's latest press…

Argentina's Lavagna to meet IMF's Koehler

Argentine Economy Minister Roberto Lavagna will meet IMF Managing Director Horst Koehler in Miami on Monday 9 February to discuss the second review of a $13.3 billion loan deal, an economy ministry source said on Thursday.

Bies on enterprise-wide compliance programs

In a speech on 'Enterprise-wide Compliance Programs' given on 4 February, Susan Schmidt Bies of the Federal Reserve warned that it is too soon to assume corporate scandals and profit restatements were a thing of the past in U.S. and global business…

Bank of England raises rates to 4%

The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee voted on Thursday 5 February to raise the Bank's repo rate by 0.25 percentage points. In a statement the MPC highlighted the 'more broadly based' world economic recovery but judged the change was need to…

BOJ says recovery on track, but yen concerns

Bank of Japan Governor Toshihiko Fukui said on Thursday 5 February that the Japanese economy probably performed strongly in the last quarter of 2003, but he highlighted the risk posed by a strong yen following the BOJ's decision to keep monetary policy…

ECB press conference with questions and answers

At the ECB's press conference on Thursday 5 February, after leaving eurozone interest rates on hold, Jean-Claude Trichet said he saw no need to amend the European Stability and Growth Pact and that the bank would not rush into any decision that impacted…

Chicago Fed's Moskow on the economic outlook

In a speech on 'Economic outlook' given on 3 February, Michael Moskow of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago said that worries that inflation is on the rise are premature, and it will take some time for pressure on resources to emerge.

Trichet: The euro - five years on

In a speech on 'The euro - five years on' given on 2 February, Jean-Claude Trichet of the ECB said the Eurozone today already represents four-fifth of the number of EU countries. He added that UK entry is very warmly welcomed by all of us but depends on…

Welteke: Strong euro 'an asset' and outlook good

Ernst Welteke told an audience in Frankfurt that the strong euro is allowing the ECB to keep interest rates low. The Bundesbank chief also said the economic prospects for the eurozone and Germany "are rather good" and urged Britain to join the euro.

BOJ on shaky ground in anti-deflation fight

This article considers whether the Bank of Japan's credibility is at risk. It asks whether the BOJ's quantitative easing policy is based on solid logic or represents a very risky move by governor Fukui. If the economy starts growing strongly it could see…