Central Banks
How Australia’s central bank won its independence
Stephen Bell says that personalities and politics drove the policy revolution at Australia’s central bank in the 1990s.
Rising from the ashes: the Central Bank of Iraq
Robert Pringle and Nick Carver trace the remarkable story of the resurrection of the war-torn country’s central bank.
Improving financial reporting
Can central banks apply international standards for financial reporting? Jeremy Foster investigates.
Why am I here?
Central Banking surveys central banks’ aims and the language they use to justify their existence.
Good governance for central banks
Henry Schiffman spells out how central banks can improve the way they are run.
Ronald Reagan: champion of monetarism
President Reagan should get more credit for ending the Great Inflation, argues John Tatom.
Interview: Christian de Boissieu
Professor de Boissieu is head of the economic advisory council attached to the French prime minister’s office. In this exclusive interview he explains how Europe’s economic rules should be rewritten. Interview by Robert Pringle.
News Analysis: Euro cash in demand
Nick Carver reports on the sharp rise in euro banknotes in circulation.
News Analysis: Retired Bank grandees face grilling in BCCI trial
Neil Courtis reports on the Bank of England’s plans for its defence.
Review of Monetary Policy Implementation: Theory, Past, and Present
A new book explains the role of the three main instruments of monetary policy implementation.
Gentlemen prefer bonds
Nick Carver looks at one way Asian central banks could boost local debt markets.
Asia’s currency in the making?
In the first of two articles on initiatives to develop financial markets in East Asia, Anthony Rowley explains why talk of a regional currency has started to get serious.
Monetary policy to support growth
With inflation driven out of the system, Mongolia’s monetary-policy makers can look to bolster economic growth.
China's issues warning on inflation
China's central bank sees some effects from its attempts to combat rising inflation, but bad debts remain a problem.
Minutes of Bank of England MPC, August
Minutes from the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee revealed a unanimous decision to raise interest rates in August, but indicate that the UK may be approaching the end of the series of rate rises which began in November 2003.
Hungary cuts rates by half percent
The central bank of Hungary reduced the base rate by half a percentage point, from 11.5 pe rcent to 11 per cent, when it met on 16 August. While the central bank pointed to improvements in the economy as the cause, it is thought that a desire to weaken…
Bank to take market view
Hidden within the Bank of England's most recent inflation report is a significant tweaking of the Bank's inflation targeting stance. CentralBankNet reports on the Bank's adoption of market forecasts of interest rates for some of its projections.