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central bank
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central bank

The bank responsible for issuing currency in a country. It sets short-term interest rates, supervises the national banking system as a whole, and is often responsible for foreign-exchange dealings on behalf of the government. It also holds the commercial reserves of the nation's clearing banks and acts as a lender of last resort to commercial banks that get into financial difficulties.

Although typically independent of central government, a central bank will work closely with it, especially in implementing monetary policy. The earliest bank to take on the role of central bank was the Bank of England. In the USA the Federal Reserve System was established 1913. Since 1999 the European Central Bank (ECB) has assumed the monetary policy powers of the central banks of those European Union countries that have adoped the euro as their currency.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
This claim ignores the fact that a substantial portion of this capital inflow originates from central banks and other quasi-governmental institutions, not from private investors.
Sweden's Riksbank said [in April] that it had almost halved its dollar holdings in favor of the euro, and central banks in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates said they were buying Europe's common currency.
Up until the 1980s, the central banks of Taiwan and Thailand--the Central Bank of China (CBC) and the Bank of Thailand (BOT)--had long enjoyed a reputation, in both official documents and scholarly accounts, as paragons of autonomous and competent monetary authorities in the developing world.
 
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