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A central bank is financially strong if it possesses resources sufficient to attain its fundamental policy objective(s). Once endowed with those resources, relations between government and central bank should be designed so that significant changes in central bank financial strength do not occur...
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Central bank financial strength is positively associated with good policy performance. Financially weak central banks generate losses which undermine macroeconomic stability and call into question the credibility of their policies. In assessing central bank financial strength a careful...
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Central banks may operate perfectly well without capital as conventionally defined. A large negative net worth, however, is likely to compromise central bank independence and interfere with its ability to attain policy objectives. If society values an independent central bank capable of...
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Central banks often hold far more assets, and issue more liabilities to finance those assets, than is necessary to provide their domestic payments systems with adequate liquidity. That is to say, their balance sheets are "large" (See Stella (2010) Minimising monetary policy (BIS Working Paper...
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