Deutsche Bundesbank
The Deutsche Bundesbank is the central bank of Germany,
comparable to the Federal Reserve System in the United States. The youngest
addition to the ranks of European central banks, the Deutsche Bundesbank gained
a position of preeminence among European central banks during the post–World War
II era.
The Reichsbank, the central bank of Nazi Germany, came to an end in 1948. In
West Germany the allied occupation authorities established a new currency, the
Deutsche Mark, and organized a regional system of autonomous central
banks, called Landeszentralbanken. At the apex of this system stood the
Bank Deutscher Länder. This bank had the exclusive privilege to issue bank notes
and acted as a lender of last resort. It was a two-tier structure, the lower
layer composed of legally independent entities, and the structure may not have
been organizationally efficient.
The Bundesbank Act of 1957 reorganized West Germany’s central banking system,
merging the independent Landeszentralbanken and the Bank Deutscher Länder. The
act incorporated these entities as the Deutsche Bundesbank, a corporation wholly
owned by the West German government. The head office remained at Frankfurt am
Main, and each of the 11 Länder central banks operated its own system of branch
banks. In 1990 the state banking system of East Germany was integrated with the
Bundesbank, and the latter assumed the responsibility for monetary policy in the
unified Germany. The system is spread out into more branches than the Federal
Reserve System in the United States; one of the Länder central banks may oversee
as many as 50 branch banks.
The distinguishing characteristic of the Bundesbank is its independence from
government officials. The German people, having suffered through two episodes of
hyperinflation in the twentieth century, were committed to establishing a
central bank that would protect the integrity of its currency. The law creating
the Bundesbank conspicuously ignored any economic goals other than price
stability. In the words of the statute:
The Bundesbank, making use of the powers in the field of monetary policy conferred upon it under this Law, shall regulate the money circulation and the supply of credit to the economy with the aim of safeguarding the currency and shall ensure the due execution by banks of payments within the country as well as to and from foreign countries.(Bank of International Settlements, 1963)
The supreme policy-making body of the Bundesbank is the Central Bank Council,
composed of a president, vice president, up to eight additional members of a
directorate, and the presidents of the 11 Länder central banks. The president of
the Federal Republic of Germany appoints the members of the directorate, each
serving eight-year terms. The president of the directorate is appointed for an
eight-year term, and is highly secure in that appointment. The president of the
Federal Republic appoints the presidents of the Länder central banks upon the
recommendation of the directorate of the Central Bank Council.
Because of its independence from government officials, the Bundesbank could
concentrate solely on controlling inflation during the post–World War II era
when other central banks, less independent of government authorities, pursued
policies aimed at reducing unemployment. During the 1970s when most Western
countries were racked by inflation, West Germany kept inflation to modest
levels, and the Bundesbank rose to become the most influential central bank in
Europe. In 1993 the European Monetary Institute, the precursor to a European
central bank, was set up in Frankfurt, symbolizing the European Union’s
commitment to sound monetary policies.
No comments:
Post a Comment