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Central Banking

Russia's banks face 'health check'

RUSSIA - An inspection team from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank start work in Moscow on Wednesday on what is described as a "comprehensive health check-up" of Russia's shaky financial sector.

Speech by M Moskow, President, Chicago Fed, 3 Apr

SPEECH - In his speech 'The Impact of Open Markets and Expanded Trade on Economic Development' the Chicago Fed chief noted that economists have recently become more bullish on the prospects for U.S. economic growth and said, "On balance, we believe the…

ECB Press Conference

PRESS CONFERENCE - Introductory statement by Willem F. Duisenberg, President of the European Central Bank, Christian Noyer, Vice-President of the European Central Bank, Frankfurt, 4 April.

Credit card holders set to rise if BOT eases rule

THAILAND - The number of credit card holders is expected to increase significantly if the Bank of Thailand agrees to decrease the minimum monthly salary required to be a card member from 15,000 to 10,000 baht, according to executives in the banking…

US Judge dismisses claims against BIS, Fed Reserve

US - A federal judge in Boston has dismissed claims of price manipulation a consultant to the Gold Antitrust Action Committee made against the Bank of International Settlements, several leading investment houses and officials of the U.S. Treasury and…

The big problem of small change

FEATURE - It is a curious fact, writes Paul Podolsky in Thursday's Wall Street Journal Europe, that the world's most trusted currency, the dollar, represents a claim on an asset no more tangible than the faith of the U.S. government. The same is true for…

Zimbabwe's c bank calls for debt issue discussion

ZIMBABWE - The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ), the country's central bank, has urged the government to intensify efforts to shift debt towards longer term securities to address the huge debt service burden, according to the Zimbabwe Inter-Africa News…

McDonough - Argentina must find its own solutions

ARGENTINA - The solutions to Argentina's current economic crisis must be found mostly by the country's own leaders, rather than through bailouts from outside the troubled nation, Federal Reserve Bank of New York President William McDonough said Tuesday.

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