Wall Street Journal (January 16)
“The prediction that 2015 will be a year of currency turmoil is already coming true.” On Thursday, the Swiss National Bank roiled markets when it dropped its currency peg. “This won’t be the last currency shock as the world’s big central banks go their own way in frantic attempts to spur a slowing global economy.”
Tags: Central bank, Currency peg, Economy, Prediction, Shock, SNB, Switzerland, Turmoil
Institutional Investor (October 10)
“As refugees from Syria and Iraq flood across the border and, the real economy suffers, Lebanon’s central bank is looking to start-up lending as a way to boost growth.” Despite an influx of 1.3 million refugees (roughly a third of its pre-crisis population), Lebanon’s “economy has remained intact. Growth, while meager, is still projected to reach 1.8 percent this year….Much of this resilience is down to the creativity of the central bank” and the novel approaches it is adopting.
Tags: Border, Central bank, Creativity, Economy, Growth, Iraq, Lebanon, Lending, Refugees, Resilience, Start-ups, Syria
New York Times (February 18, 2014)
“Some analysts and public officials say the beleaguered euro zone is finally on the road to recovery…. But theirs is an overly optimistic view.” Europe risks falling into deflation “if government officials and central bankers do not take steps to bolster the economy.” Coordinated efforts would be ideal, but with European governments unlikely to work together “it is up to the central bank to act when it meets again next month.”
Tags: Analysts, Central bank, Deflation, Economy, Euro zone, Europe, European governments, Optimistic, Recovery
Financial Times (February 6, 2014)
“In an era when much of the world is worried about the possibility of drifting into Japanese-style deflation, one country has precisely the opposite problem: unbridled inflation.” Over the last 5 years, India’s consumer prices have been rising annually by close to 10%. “That is no small matter for the multitudinous poor, for whom escalating food prices can summon the spectre of hunger. Nor does it do much for macroeconomic stability, which India badly needs in this year of tapering and tricky political transition.” Fortunately, new central bank governor Raghuram Rajan looks “up to the task.” With his tough policies, he may prove the Paul Volcker of India.
Tags: Central bank, CPI, Deflation, Food, Governor, Hunger, India, Inflation, Japan, Macroeconomics, Paul Volker, Poor, Raghuram Rajan, Stability
Institutional Investor (December 17, 2013)
With the introduction of a new single supervisory mechanism, the European Central Bank (ECB) is positioned to play a integral role. “The coronation of the ECB as banking supervisor will make the central bank an even more powerful institution, along the lines of the Fed, which emerged from the crisis as the dominant U.S. financial regulator.”
Tags: Banking, Central bank, Crisis, ECB, eurozone, Fed, Financial regulator, Supervisory mechanism, U.S.
Forbes (April 4, 2013)
“Quantitative easing is a global craze, and now a man named Kuroda is showing Bernanke and Draghi how to do it big time….While markets expected Kuroda’s BoJ to make a bold move, the size of the purchases and the wide array of financial assets the central bank plans to stock up on came as a surprise, boosting Japanese stocks and sending the Nikkei 225 higher by 2.2%.”
Tags: Bernanke, BOJ, Central bank, Draghi, Japan, Kuroda, Nikkei, Quantitative easing, Stocks