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Central Banks

Fed Poole- forecasts subject to significant error

The consensus view of private sector economists that U.S. gross domestic product will grow 2.1% in 2001 is "reasonable," but also subject to significant error, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President William Poole said on Feb 15, 2000. Thus it's…

Belgium eyes central bank gold profit for pensions

Belgium's government plans to use profits from the past transfer of gold from its central bank to the European Central Bank to start a state pension fund it had hoped to fill with proceeds from the sale of mobile telephone licences, Belgian media…

Mexico says 2000 GDP grew at robust 6.9 pct

Mexico's gross domestic product expanded by 6.9 percent during 2000, the fastest growth rate seen by Latin America's second-largest economy in nearly 20 years even with a year-end slowdown, the Finance Ministry said on Feb 15, 2001. The country's…

Interview: ECB's Otmar Issing

The chief economist and executive board member of the EuropeanCentral Bank gives an inside view on the ECB's thinking: Why hasthe ECB recently started publishing macroeconomic projectionsrather than forecasts, and what do these projections mean…

Japan LDP members call for BOJ's Hayami to resign

Some members of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's (LDP) financial panel called for Bank of Japan Governor Masaru Hayami to resign at a meeting on Feb 14, 2001 a senior panel member said.They criticised Hayami for ending the policy of guiding key…

Official Intervention in the Forex Mkt-Mark Taylor

"Official Intervention in the Foreign Exchange Market: Is It Effective, and, If So, How Does It Work?" is a new discussion paper by Mark P Taylor and Lucio Sarno published by the Centre for Economic and Policy Research. They look at the theory and…

Fed's Stern sees improved economy in Jan 2001

Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis President Gary Stern said on Feb. 14, 2001 that slower growth in business inventories in December 2000 and improved retail sales and employment data in January 2001 were constructive indicators for the economy. "It…

Bank of England expects growth to slow in Q2 2001

The United Kingdom's annual growth rate will drop to around 2% in the second half of 2001, the Bank of England projected, even as unemployment data showed the number of jobless Britons fell far more than expected in January 2001. In its first quarterly…

Bank of France raises growth forecast for Q1 2001

The Bank of France raised its forecast for first-quarter economic growth in 2001 after its latest survey of business sentiment pointed to a rosier outlook than the bank had anticipated previously. The central bank raised its forecast for first-quarter…

Ferguson speech-US undergoing inventory adjustment

The U.S. economy "is clearly undergoing a stock adjustment" to reconcile the supply and demand of capital goods, Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Roger Ferguson said on Feb 14 at a speech at Vanderbilt University. Ferguson said it is unclear how long the…

BoE's forecast confirms loosening stance

The Bank of England's February 2001 inflation report confirmed marketexpectations that UK interest rates were likely to head down over thecourse of 2001. Mervyn King, deputy governor for monetary stability, who presented thereport despite a bout of flu,…

Dollar mood jittery ahead of Greenspan remarks

The dollar's near-term fate hung in the balance on Feb 13, 2000 ahead of potentially market-movingcomments by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan in Congress. Dealers generally expect Greenspan to adopt a cautiously optimistic tone on the U.S…

Japan admits economic going is getting tougher

Japan acknowledged on Feb 13, 2001 it is flirting with recession, but ministers and some economists expressed confidence the steps by the Bank of Japan (BOJ) to calm the money markets would help to put a floor under the economy. Economics Minister Taro…

Israel cbank warns employee unrest disrupt policy

The Bank of Israel cautioned on Feb 13, 2001 that continued labour unrest at the central bank could disrupt monetary policy. The discount rate is maintained through regularly scheduled auctions in which the central bank sells or buys money. If these…

Interview: Jordan's cbank governor Umayy Toukan

The new governor of the Central Bank of Jordan, Umayy Toukan, has given his first exclusive interview since taking up the post earlier in 2001. He was interview by Reuters journalist, Suleiman al-Khalidi, in Amman on Feb 13. In the interview the governor…

Greenspan-Fed may expand debt types in portfolio

The Federal Reserve continues to explore its options for implementing monetary policy as the stock of its preferred instrument, U.S. Treasury debt, declines, Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan said on Feb 13, 2001. Two of the options on the table include debt…

Polish leftist MP wants to change c.bank charter

A senior deputy from the ex-communist SLD social democrats, the party expected to win upcoming parliamentary elections, said the central bank's charter should be changed, a newspaper reported on Feb 13, 2001. Marek Borowski, SLD's deputy speaker of the…

IMF team to review Ecuador's dollarization process

A team from the International Monetary Fund will arrive in Ecuador in the next few days to review the progress of the dollarization process implemented by the country in 2000. The three-member IMF team will stay in Ecuador for about 15 days, analyzing…

G7 to review global economy at Palermo fortress

When the world's leading financial barons meet in Sicily this weekend [Feb 16, 2001] to review their armoury for spurring the global economy, they will do so at a site chosen as a strategic look-out point dating back more than 2,000 years. Finance…

Venezuelan fin min-cbank won't fix interest rates

Venezuelan Finance Minister Jose Rojas reiterated Feb 13, 2001 that the central bank won't fix credit and deposit rates in the banking sector. "The central bank is not going to fix rates," Rojas said in a televised interview. In a nod toward the monetary…

Bank of Canada cuts growth forecast

Canada's central bank said officially for the first time on Feb 13, 2001 that the U.S. economic slowdown may cut Canada's growth rate to below 3 percent, but it remained positive about the country's economic prospects. "Primarily because of the spillover…

Greenspan said the U.S. was not in recession

Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said on Feb 13, 2001 the U.S. economy was not in a recession but may face a rocky transition as it downshifts from super-charged growth rates of the past several years. When asked point-blank in a Senate Banking…

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