Central Banking Journal
Underpinning systemic stability - the case for standards
Measures designed to make the financial system safer may not achieve their aim. There is a better way, Sir Andrew Large and Sir David Walker argue
The StabFund: a look at the inner workings of a 'bad bank'
Marcel Zimmermann and Zoltan Szelyes explain how the Swiss National Bank managed to strengthen the country’s largest financial institution at the height of the crisis by creating a bad bank.
Communicating macroprudential policy
A sound communications strategy can enhance the impact of macroprudential policy actions and build the political support needed for such steps, Tim Ng writes
The unintended consequences of the new prudential framework
The new regulatory code could have some dangerous side effects, Jacques de Larosière writes
Conflicts of interest and systemic risk
In regulating against conflicts of interest, central bankers will have to study exactly how each major bank is making its profits in future, John Chown argues
Are CoCos from cloud cuckoo-land?
The rationale for requiring banks to hold contingent capital is right. However, the mechanics of their operation and market implications may be subject to doubt, argues Charles Goodhart.
Welcome to Twin Peaks
The decision by the British government to adopt the Twin Peaks model of financial regulation represents a significant turnaround in the Bank of England’s political fortunes, writes Michael Taylor.
Too big to fail, too big to reform
Robert Pringle and Hugh Sandeman ask is this the damning verdict of the latest batch of books on the financial crisis?
Tokyo story
Robert Pringle reports from Tokyo on how the crisis has impacted Japan’s outlook.
Britain’s banking commission must be bold
Britain’s banking commission must be bold
Why monetary base control can offer stability
There is a way of replicating the big achievements of the gold standard without going back to gold, argue Brendan Brown and Robert Pringle.
Why attitudes to gold have changed
Jill Leyland investigates why the events of recent years, in particular the financial crisis, have tipped the balance away from net official sector selling towards net buying of gold.
Politics is hampering national wealth management
Poor communication and differing incentives between politicians and national wealth managers are undermining performance, argues Gary Smith.
Rethinking reserve management
The crisis demands a rethink on both the size and composition of central banks’ reserves, argues Ludek Niedermayer.
How Ireland is reforming its central bank
A change of leadership offers Ireland’s central bank an opportunity to assert its independence from the country’s much maligned political and banking elite. It is doing much to grasp it, Claire Jones finds.
Interview: Patrick Honohan
The governor of the Central Bank of Ireland tells Claire Jones what went wrong in Ireland and how he plans to stop it happening again.
Donald Kohn: a life in central banking
The outgoing vice chairman of the Federal Reserve Board has spent 40 years at the central bank. He tells Blair Baker about the significant evolution in policymaking he has witnessed and, latterly, overseen.
Preventing system failure
A model borrowed from ecology offers new insights for policymakers in how to understand and combat systemic risk, writes Claire Jones.