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British inflation dips by record amount

British annual inflation fell to 4.5% in October, down from 5.2% the previous month, on the back of the slump in oil prices. The 0.7 percentage point slide is the biggest since January 1997, when official records began, and since April 1992 based on…

INTERVIEW: Charles Wyplosz

Charles Wyplosz, a professor at the Graduate Institute, Geneva, and an occasional consultant to the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, tells CentralBankNews.com why the Fund cannot play a role in regulating the financial system, why the Paulson…

Economists back Bernanke

Private-sector economists have come out in strong support of Ben Bernanke, the embattled chairman of the Federal Reserves, suggesting that the new Obama administration should reappoint him in January 2010.

Eurozone in recession

The eurozone is in recession following the release of official statistics on Friday that showed that its economy contracted for the second quarter in a row.

El-Erian sees "very bumpy road" ahead

Mohamed El-Erian, one of the world's most successful investors and a former deputy director at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), says the current crisis underlines the fact the infrastructure did not support the activities taking place in financial…

SWF growth to slow

Stephen Jen, an economist at Morgan Stanley, has adjusted downward his estimate of the growth of sovereign wealth funds in the coming years.

ECB collateral to include non-euro debt

The European Central Bank (ECB) will for the first time accept European bonds denominated in dollars, sterling and yen as collateral as of 14 November, the central bank said on Wednesday.

Paulson continues Tarp U-turn

Henry Paulson, the US secretary of the treasury, has signaled a further shift in the way the administration will use the $700 billion at its disposal under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (Tarp), by saying purchasing bad assets from financial…

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