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Bank of England losing economists to the City

The annual report of the Bank of England, published on 25 June, acknowledged concerns about the departure of some of the central bank's economists, seduced away from Threadneedle Street by the promise of higher pay in the financial service sector.

BIS warns on inflation and trade imbalances

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) noted in its 77th Annual Report, released on 24 June, that the performance of the global economy over the last few years has been extraordinary, raising "questions about the source and, closely related, the…

The continuing rise of the kiwi

The New Zealand dollar continues its rapid rise on perceptions that the central bank will be unable to stem a rally powered by Japanese investors looking for higher yields. The currency rose to its highest level in 22 years on 25 June.

FSA's hedge fund supremo changes sides

The British Financial Services Authority has seen a number of its senior regulators leaving to join the ranks of the regulated, and the latest is Chris Rexworthy, who was responsible for setting up the Authority's hedge fund practice.

Tight monetary policy in Sri Lanka pays off

The Central Bank of Sri Lanka announced on 25 June that rates will remained unchanged at 10.5%. The central bank also published its regular review of monetary policy on 25 June, noting that improvements in the external and monetary sectors of the economy…

"Whitening effect" changes Hungary's thinking

In a surprise move the National Bank of Hungary cut its benchmark interest rate on 25 June. Rates remain the highest in the European Union, despite the 25 basis point cut which took them to 7.75%. It was the first rate change in Hungary since October…

Angola can end this year with 10% inflation: cb

The National Bank of Angola, the country's central bank, has stated its confidence that Angola can end this year with an inflation rate of 10%, while acknowledging that structural difficulties in the economy may get in the way of achieving this…

BoJ to continue gradual rate hikes

The minutes of the May 16-17 board meeting of the Bank of Japan confirmed the view of members that the central bank should continue to raise interest rates gradually, in line with growth and inflation prospects.

King outvoted over rates increase again

The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Bank of England narrowly defeated governor Mervyn King at their policy meeting in June, voting 5-4 to keep the rate unchanged at 5.5%. This was the second time that the governor was on the losing end of an MPC…

Sweden raises key rate - and more to come

Sveriges Riksbank, Sweden's central bank raised its benchmark interest rate on 20 June for the eighth time in 18 months, this time lifting the repurchase rate by a quarter point to 3.5%, the highest level for over four years.

New governor for Slovenian central bank

After a months-long deadlock the parliament of Slovenia has finally approved a new central bank governor. The new governor is Marko Kranjec, an economics professor and financial expert who was the country's first finance minister.

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