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Weber charts course for ECB rate rise

European Central Bank council member Axel Weber said in an interview published Tuesday 9 May that interest rates need to be increased by at least a quarter point to curb inflation in the eurozone.

Prerequisites of a single Gulf currency

According to this article published Monday 8 May, the issuance of a single currency by 2010 in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) member states will crown Gulf economic integration efforts.

Richmond Fed names new first vice president

Sally Green was named first vice president and chief operating officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond on Tuesday 9 May, and will oversee the financial services and support areas of the Fifth District operations as of 1 August.

G10 central bankers wary of inflation

Central bank chiefs from leading industrialised and developing countries called on Monday 8 May for "very special attention" to guard against ongoing global economic growth from becoming inflationary.

PBOC trying to cool overheating sectors

The People's Bank of China is seeking to cool overheating economic sectors such as real estate as well as cut its huge foreign exchange reserves, a senior Chinese government official said.

Asia is getting ready to dump the dollar peg

According to this article published Monday 8 May, even as they continue to pile up U.S. debt in their foreign exchange reserves to keep their currencies stable against the dollar, Asian nations are preparing for a scenario where the dollar collapses…

Philippines, Japan sign currency swap

The Philippine central bank and the Bank of Japan have signed a currency swap arrangement letting both countries draw from each other's foreign reserves for any "immediate need".

Why the dollar is set to plunge

The fundamental reason for the dollar's weakness has become greater since it enjoyed a modest revival from the end of 2004, according to this article published Monday 8 May.

Chairman Bernanke's clarity issue

According to this article published Thursday 4 May, while Ben Bernanke is unlikely to make radical changes in the statement issued after the next FOMC meeting, Fed watchers say he could aid his cause by eventually disclosing the central bank's forecasts…

German pay policy points to a eurozone design flaw

According to this article by Paul de Grauwe, published Friday 5 May, in spite of the fact that the eurozone is a union of countries which set their monetary policy jointly, wage policies have been characterised by a blatant co-ordination failure.

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