Banknotes: January to March 2024
A round-up of news and salient issues that have affected central bankers in the past three months
People: January to March 2024
A round-up of central bankers in the news and on the move during the past three months
Long-term inflationary pressure set to rise, research finds
Changed environment makes central banks’ task harder, Kenneth Rogoff and other researchers say
Central bank independence usually safeguarded by law
But one in 10 respondents see their autonomy threatened
Awards
Central bank of the year: Central Bank of Brazil
The Latam central bank has pursued its mandate in an exemplary fashion, despite external pressures
Governor of the year: Andriy Pyshnyy
Pyshnyy kept Ukraine’s wartime economy stable and won vital foreign support under huge pressure
Central Banking Awards 2024: second group of winners unveiled
Ukraine’s Andriy Pyshnyy named Governor of the year
Central Banking Awards 2024: first winners unveiled
Awards go to Central bank of the year, plus Reserve manager, Risk manager and more
Editor's choice

Escaping the structural liquidity trap
Investment needs to be subsidised not taxed if developed countries want to avoid inflation and financial crises, writes Andrew Smithers

Fintech Benchmarks 2024 report – the promise and threat of AI
Data reveals how central banks are developing CBDC, tapping into AI tools and using cloud services

The BoJ’s possible path to positive rates
Are market expectations about a spring shift from negative Japanese rates credible, asks Sayuri Shirai

Training central bank communicators
The skills needed for communicating in a social media and artificial intelligence world
Benchmarking
Central bank independence usually safeguarded by law
But one in 10 respondents see their autonomy threatened
Most read
- Central bank of the year: Central Bank of Brazil
- BIS project aims to redesign global payments infrastructure
- RBA to shift to “ample reserves” operational framework

A new climate of change
Central banks are warming up to address climate risks just as US interest cools
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