This article LTG
GoldRock will introduce you to the central bank of Ireland ~
Central Bank of Ireland (Irish: BANC
CEANNAIS NA
Héireann, founded in 1943, is the financial service regulatory agency of the Republic of Ireland and was once the central bank of Ireland. The bank was responsible for issuing the country's currency Ireland pound before joining the euro zone in Ireland.
The Central Bank of Irish Bank is located in Merma Larin, where Irish citizens can use non -current assets of Ireland coin and currency for euro.
development path
According to the central bank's 1942 bill, the organization was renamed the Irish Central Bank Monetary Committee on February 1, 1943.
In May 2003, it reorganized and renamed the Central Bank of Ireland and the Financial Administration (Central
Bank and Financial Service Authority of Ireland).
The euro began starting from January 1, 2002.
In 2010, according to the Central Bank Reform Act, the Irish State wants to create a new single -institution Irish Bank, Central Bank and financial supervision.The decree was implemented on October 1, 2010.
Monetary Policy
Sonyford's currency center is Irish currency issuance, storage and distribution sites.
Central Bank of Irish Bank of the European Central Bank's monetary policy to formulate a level and be responsible for maintaining the stability of Ireland prices.The purpose is to strengthen the effective implementation of monetary policy by providing a briefing of the high -quality European Council Council to strengthen the effectiveness of participating in the formulation of monetary policy.Helping the stability of Ireland's domestic finance and the entire euro zone, another focus is to solve the overall liquidity of the financial crisis and monitoring the banking system.
Feature introduction
1. The committee did not become a characteristic of a central bank at the time:
2. It does not cash with cash reserves of commercial banks;
3. It does not have legal power to limit credit, although it can promote the Bank of Ireland;
4. It does not exist through the open market operation;
5. Ireland's external currency reserves are mainly as foreign assets of commercial banks;
6. This serious restrictions on the ability of banks to implement independent monetary policy.