Commentary
Stress tests key for financial stability – Benchmarks participants
Most Benchmarks participants conduct stress tests more than once a year, but methods vary
Cyber security exercises useful, say benchmark participants
Over half of participants simulate cyber attacks – a quarter do so more than once a year
Cyber attacks rising, most benchmark institutions say
Financial sector hacking attacks rose in past two years
NPLs down in nearly 70% of jurisdictions, despite Covid-19
Lower income nations hit harder than most during past five years; Asia, Africa and Americas NPLs on different trajectory to Europe
Most central banks cannot bring criminal charges against banks
But 87.5% of institutions report they can refer these charges to other public institutions
Central banks set monetary policy around eight times a year
African central banks reported setting monetary policy less frequently than peers
Central banks split on blackout periods
Reasons for operating blackout periods include facilitating effective policy transmission and avoiding speculation
Press conferences tend to be held for every monetary policy decision
The events can be a valuable tool for policy transparency and clarity
In-depth reports less frequent than monetary policy meetings
Over 80% of central banks set monetary policy without always publishing in-depth reports
Central banks divided on publishing policy meeting minutes
Central banks in advanced economies more likely to publish minutes
Policy-maker votes largely kept secret
Most central banks do not reveal how individual monetary policy-makers vote
Policy-makers and staff often determine headline forecasts
Joint approach may help conquer systemic bias
Majority of central banks do not take account of forecast errors
Surveys of inflationary expectations used widely, alongside macroeconomic and market indicators
Majority of central banks have power to issue debt for monetary purposes
Central banks pointed to draining liquidity as a reason for issuing debt
FX market intervention key tool for emerging market economies
Central bank markets departments perform a wide range of different roles
Asset purchase programmes prevalent among advanced economies
But just 17% of emerging market economies said they operate a purchase programme
Majority of central banks use corridors to set market rates
A handful use floors due to unconventional policy, and some use other methods
Salaries higher for monetary policy staff than markets specialists
Budgets for monetary operations/markets teams were larger, but monetary policy staff were slightly better compensated
Majority of retail payment systems lack real-time processing and settlement
Over half of RPSs in emerging market economies were owned by central banks, but in advanced economies this fell to less than a quarter
Majority of central banks charge RTGS usage fee
Annual cost of running RTGS systems ranged between $35,000 to over $16 million
Third parties often develop RTGS technology
Seventy-one percent of respondents said the technology underpinning their RTGS system was developed solely by a third party or in collaboration with the central bank
Payments department responsible for oversight of payments infrastructure
Heads of payments systems oversight often report to departmental head, but some report directly to the governor
Central banks look set to upgrade RTGS systems in the next 12 months
Nine central banks said they are planning ISO 20022 adoption
Over 50% of central banks actively regulate cost of payments services
Central banks with explicit payments mandate more involved in setting cost limits