Eighty Years of History of the Central Bank of Chile
The Central Bank of Chile was founded in 1925, to provide the country with an institution that could stabilize the currency, regulate interest and discount rates, and avoid disruptions in the country’s financial, industrial en economic development (Decree Law N°486, August 22nd, 1925). But a weak institutional framework meant that the Bank, far from ameliorating these problems, aggravated them, leading to decades of high and persistent inflation. Inflation became under control only during the past decade, after a new law enacted in 1989 granted the Central Bank full independence, allowing it to implement an inflation-targeting monetary policy regime. In achieving this result were also fundamental the fiscal stability and the building of a robust financial sector, both attained since the mid-1980s. This paper reviews the history of the Central Bank of Chile since its early days, putting its changes in the appropriate historical context.
Year of publication: |
2005-12
|
---|---|
Authors: | Corbo, Vittorio ; Hernández, Leonardo |
Institutions: | Banco Central de Chile |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Institutions, Economic Policies and Growth: Lessons From the Chilean Experience
Corbo, Vittorio, (2005)
-
Private Capital Inflows and the Role of Economic Fundamentals
Corbo, Vittorio, (1998)
-
Capital Inflows, Credit Booms, and Macroeconomic Vulnerability: The Cross-Country Experience
Hernández, Leonardo,
- More ...