This paper provides a simple, quantitative, net-worth-based approach to assessing the need for central bank capital. It derives a concept of "core capital" (a function of the central bank's operating expenditures and the carrying cost of its international reserves) as the minimum capital needed by a central bank to ensure the credibility of its inflation target. The approach is illustrated with the published accounts of three loss-making central banks and selected accounting entries for a broader sample of central banks. Policy implications are explored. In particular, the paper argues that central bank capitalizations cannot be automatic and require instead a broad policy debate.
E58 - Central Banks and Their Policies ; E63 - Comparative or Joint Analysis of Fiscal and Monetary Policy; Stabilization ; H63 - Debt; Debt Management ; M40 - Accounting and Auditing. General