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Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
Lecture
# 3
CENTRAL
BANK
A
central
bank, reserve
bank or monetary
authority, is an
entity responsible for
the
monetary
policy of its country or of a
group of member states, such
as the European
Central
Bank
(ECB) in the European Union
or the Federal Reserve System in the
United States of
America.
Its primary responsibility is to
maintain the stability of
the national currency
and
money
supply, but more active
duties include controlling
subsidized-loan interest rates,
and
acting
as a "bailout" lender of last
resort to the banking sector
during times of
financial
crisis
(private banks often being
integral to the national
financial system).
It
may also have supervisory
powers, to ensure that banks and other
financial institutions do
not
behave recklessly or fraudulently. A
central bank is usually
headed by a governor,
but
the
titles are president, chief
executive, and managing director
respectively for the
European
Central
Bank the Hong Kong
Monetary Authority and the
Monetary Authority of
Singapore.
In
most countries the central
bank is state owned and has
a minimal degree of
autonomy,
which
allows for the possibility
of government intervening in monetary
policy. An
"Independent
central bank" is one which
operates under rules
designed to prevent
political
interference; examples include
the US Federal Reserve, the Bank of
England (since
1997),
and the Bank of Canada, the
Reserve Bank of Australia, the
Banco de la Repśblica
de
Colombia, and the European
Central Bank.
Activities
and responsibilities
Functions
of a central bank (not all
functions are carried out by
all banks):
Implementing
the basis of monetary
policy
·
Monopoly
on the issue of
banknotes
·
Controls
the nation's entire money
supply
·
The
Government's banker and the bankers'
bank ("Lender of Last
Resort")
·
Manages
the country's foreign
exchange and gold reserves and
the Government's
·
stock
register
Regulation
and supervision of the banking
industry
·
Setting
the official interest rate -
used to manage both
inflation and the
country's
·
exchange
rate - and ensuring that this rate
takes effect via a variety
of policy mechanisms.
Monetary
Policy
Central
banks implement a country's chosen
monetary policy. At the most
basic level, this
involves
establishing what form of
currency the country may
have, whether a fiat
currency,
gold-backed
currency, currency board or a currency
union. When a country has
its own
national
currency, this involves the
issue of some form of standardized
currency, which is
essentially
a form of promissory note: a
promise to exchange the note
for "money" under
certain
circumstances. Historically, this was
often a promise to exchange
the money for
precious
metals in some fixed amount.
Now, when many currencies
are fiat money,
the
"promise
to pay" consists of nothing more
than a promise to pay the
same sum in the
same
currency.
Many
central banks are "banks" in
the sense that they
hold assets (foreign
exchange, gold,
and
other financial assets) and
liabilities. A central bank's primary
liabilities are the
currency
outstanding, and these liabilities
are backed by the assets
the bank owns.
10
Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
Unusually,
however, central banks in jurisdictions
with fiat currencies may
"create" new
money
to back its own liabilities, to
theoretically unlimited
amounts.
In
many countries, the central
bank may use another
country's currency either
directly (in a
currency
union), or indirectly, by using a
currency board. In the
latter case, local currency
is
directly
backed by the central bank's
holdings of a foreign currency in a
fixed-ratio; this
mechanism
is used, notably, in Hong
Kong and Estonia.
In
countries with fiat money,
monetary policy may be used
as a shorthand form for
the
interest
rate targets and other active measures
undertaken by the monetary
authority.
Central
or National
There
is no standard terminology for the name
of a central bank, but many
countries use the
"Bank
of Country" form (e.g., Bank
of England, Bank of Canada,
Bank of Russia). Some
are
styled national banks, such as
the National Bank of
Ukraine. In other cases they
may
incorporate
the word "Central" (e.g.
European Central Bank,
Central Bank of Ireland).
In
many
countries, there may be
private banks that incorporate
the term national.
Many
countries
have state-owned banks or other
quasi-government entities that
have entirely
separate
functions, such as financing
imports and exports.
In
some countries, particularly in
some Communist countries,
the term national bank
may
be
used to indicate both the
monetary authority and the
leading banking entity, such
as the
USSR's
Gosbank (state bank). In other
countries, the term national
bank may be used to
indicate
that the central bank's goals
are broader than monetary
stability, such as full
employment,
industrial development, or other
goals.
Interest
Rate Interventions
Typically
a central bank controls
certain types of short-term
interest rates. These
influence
the
stock- and bond markets as
well as mortgage and other
interest rates. The
European
Central
Bank for example announces
its interest rate at the
meeting of its
Governing
Council
(in the case of the Federal
Reserve, the Board of
Governors).
Both
the Federal Reserve and the ECB
are composed of one or more
central bodies that
are
responsible
for the main decisions about
interest rates and the size and
type of open market
operations,
and several branches to execute its
policies. In the case of the
Fed, they are
the
local
Federal Reserve Banks, for the
ECB they are the
national central banks.
Interest
rate interventions are the
most common and are dealt
with in more detail
below.
Limits
of Enforcement Power
Contrary
to popular perception, central banks
are not all-powerful and
have limited powers
to
put their policies into
effect. Most importantly,
although the perception by
the public may
be
that the "Central bank"
controls some or all
interest rates and currency rates,
economic
theory,
(and substantial empirical
evidence) shows that it is
impossible to do both at once in
an
open economy. Robert Mundell's
"Impossible Trinity" is the
most famous formulation
of
these
limited powers, and postulates
that it is impossible to target
monetary policy
(broadly,
interest
rates), the exchange rate (through a
fixed rate) and maintain
free capital
movement.
Since
most Western economies are
now considered "Open" with
free capital movement,
this
essentially
means that central banks may
target interest rates or
exchange rates with
credibility,
but not both at
once.
11
Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
Even
when targeting interest rates,
most central banks have
limited ability to influence
the
rates
actually paid by private individuals and
companies.
Even
the US must engage in buying
and selling to meet its targets. In the
most famous case
of
policy failure, George Soros
arbitraged the pound
sterling's relationship to the
ECU and
(after
making $2B himself and
forcing the UK to spend over
$8B defending the
pound)
forced
it to abandon its policy. Since then he
has been a harsh critic of
clumsy bank policies
and
argued that no one should be able to do
what he in fact did.
The
most complex relationships
are those between the yuan
and the US dollar, and
between
the
Euro and its neighbors. The
situation in Cuba is so exceptional as to
require the Cuban
peso
to be dealt with simply as an
exception, since the US forbids
direct trade with
Cuba.
US
dollars were ubiquitous in
Cuba's economy after its
legalization in 1991, but
were
officially
removed from circulation in 2004 and
replaced by the Convertible
peso.
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