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Central Banking

Deutsche Bundesbank Monthly Report, October 2002

REPORT - Germany's central bank, on 14 November published its Monthly Report for October 2002. The Bundesbank said in its monthly report that gross domestic product grew by just 0.25 percent between July and September, compared to 0.3 percent expansion…

Britain held back by isolation from euro

LETTER - Letter published in the Financial Times, 18 November by Simon Buckby, Campaign Director, Britain in Europe. He says Britain's label of the 'reluctant European' has cost it dear and membership of the euro will be the first step in repairing the…

Domingo Solans on the euro as a driving force

SPEECH - Eugenio Domingo Solans of the European Central Bank said five years is a very short period of time in the normal life of a central bank. He compared the ECB to the Banco de San Carlos, the forerunner of the Bank of Spain created in 1782…

Swedes to hold euro referendum

SWEDEN - Sweden gets the go ahead for a euro referendum from the government but as we reported last week deputy governor of the Swedish Central Bank, Eva Srejber, thinks 2006 is a realistic timetable for Sweden to enter EMU. Swedish trade unionists…

Bundesbank chief gives backing to EU growth pact

GERMANY - Bundesbank president Ernst Welteke, who sits on the ECB's interest rate setting council, throws his support behind the stability and growth pact which was labelled "stupid" by Romano Prodi recently. "The increasingly open attacks on the pact…

French drive for securities regulator

FRANCE - The debate over whether Europe should have a single securities regulator continues as Paris based Eurofi, which has close links with the French government, plans to publish proposals based on a poll of financial services companies.

German coins make their mark in the eurozone

GERMANY - Though recent surveys suggest many Germans want their old marks back, it looks like German minted euro coins are poised to flood across borders. Because a third of all euro coins are produced with German national images on the reverse some…

Edward George on price/earnings ratios

SPEECH - Sir Edward George of the Bank of England told the Association of Corporate Treasurers last week that on some measures price/earnings ratos were back to the long-term averages. Is he saying the equity bubble is over, at least in the UK?

IMF Issues Press Statement on Argentina

PRESS RELEASE - Ms. Anne Krueger, First Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), underlined outstanding problems to be resolved between the Fund and Argentina in a statement on 14 November.

The Inflation Targeting Framework in Norway

RESEARCH - IMF Working Paper, November 2002 by Jarkko Soikkeli. This paper assesses the institutional and technical design of Norway's inflation targeting framework, as well as its potential implications for the practical implementation of monetary…

Crisis Prevention and Crisis Management

RESEARCH - IMF Working Paper, November 2002 by Udaibir Das and Marc Quintyn, Monetary and Exchange Affairs Department, 'Crisis Prevention and Crisis Management: The Role of Regulatory Governance'. This paper first defines four key components of…

Spotting the next asset price bubble

ARTICLE - A thoughtful article in last Friday's FT by John Calverly of American Express Bank suggests that an asset valuation committee should be set up to warn of potential asset price bubbles. Though Calverly was directing his remarks to the UK, it is…

Swedish central bank cuts rates

SWEDEN - The Riksbank, the Swedish central bank, cut its key repo rate by 25 basis points to 4 per cent on Friday, warning there were clear signs of a weakening in industrial activity and exports.

Sterling coins may contain more nickel than euros

UK - Britain in Europe (BiE), a lobby group who campaign for UK entry to the euro, have come up with the perfect riposte to euro sceptics who complain that the euro coins contain high levels of nickel which can cause skin irritation. A Europhile lobby…

Argentina defaults on World Bank loan

ARGENTINA - The Argentine government on Thursday took the extraordinary step of defaulting on a loan repayment to the World Bank, in a sign of its intense frustration over negotiations with the bank's sister institution, the International Monetary Fund.

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