Le rôle de la banque centrale (document en anglais)
Dissertations Gratuits : Le rôle de la banque centrale (document en anglais). Recherche parmi 300 000+ dissertationsPar raitay • 23 Août 2012 • 3 193 Mots (13 Pages) • 1 398 Vues
3.1 Objectives of Central Banks
The role of central banks in microfinance is related to their broader role in the
financial system and in the economy more generally. Hence, any discussion of the
role of central banks in microfinance must be informed by the debates that have
taken place in recent years on their broader role and objectives.
Central banks have a number of objectives, which Chandavarkar (1996) has
classified as follows:
(i) tactical or macroeconomic objectives (relating primarily to the domestic price
level and the exchange rate);
(ii) long-term strategic objectives of financial sector development (including the
development of an effective payments system and other forms of financial
infrastructure); and
(iii) sectoral or microeconomic objectives (such as prudential supervision and deposit
insurance).
The goals of monetary policy include economic growth, low inflation, and stability of
the currency. However, most commentators now believe that the main contribution
that monetary policy can make to economic management in the long run is to maintain
low inflation. It is generally agreed that low inflation provides a necessary base for
sustained economic growth and development. Indeed, in a number of countries, low
inflation has proved important for the development of a sustainable microfinance
sector. In some cases governments have set indicative inflation targets, with central
banks expected to maintain the rate of inflation within a target band. It is also generally
accepted that central banks are most effective in maintaining low inflation and in
performing their other proper functions when they are independent of government.
There has been a trend in a number of industrial countries recently to divide
the functions of the central bank between two separate agencies. In this model, the
central bank proper retains responsibility for the conduct of monetary policy, stability
of the financial system, and regulation of the payments system. A new bank
supervision agency is established to undertake prudential regulation and supervision
of deposit-taking institutions.
However, so far at least, this model has not been adopted to any extent in
developing countries of Asia. In all but one of the countries included in this study, the
central bank retains responsibility for both monetary policy and prudential regulation
and supervision of the banking sector. The exception is Indonesia, where
3 Role of Central Banks
Central banks act
in the broader
financial system
and in the macro-economy
Contemporary Thinking on Central Bank Objectives
For most contemporary commentators, central bank objectives should
include:
• macroeconomic stability, relating to domestic inflation and the
foreign exchange rate
• longer term considerations of financial sector development
• immediate issues of the sound management and financial health of
financial institutions
Central banks in
DMCs retain their
regulatory and
supervisory
functions.
Indonesia is the
only exception
responsibility for prudential supervision of licensed financial institutions is to be
transferred from the central bank to a separate supervisory agency by the end of
2002.
3.2 Developmental and Promotional
Activities of Central Banks
A more important issue for the purposes of this study relates to what may be called
the “developmental”activities of a central bank. How central banks see these activities
depends to some extent upon the level of maturity and development of each financial
system. According to Chandavarkar, “In the early days of the central bank the accent
has necessarily to be on the development of a banking system to control because this
is not only a logical order but also the typical historical sequence…”(1996, 95).
Reference to the relevant legislation, or to the official “mandate”of a central
bank, may not be very helpful as a guide to the character of its current activities. Such
legislation tends to be changed infrequently and at long intervals; the actual activities
of the bank may diverge from the legal situation increasingly over time.
In this context, Chandavarkar makes the distinction between “develop-mental”and “promotional”functions of a central bank. He argues that the exercise of
developmental functions is justified, if at all, only in the very early stages of central
banking. These functions
...