Norwegian central bank raises rate to 1.50 per cent
|
|
|
|
|
Oslo - Norway's central bank on Wednesday raised its benchmark interest rate by 0.25 percentage points to 1.50 per cent, citing slightly higher inflation and signs of economic recovery. "Unemployment is considerably lower than previously projected. The global economy is in a deep downturn, but there are signs of renewed growth," Governor Svein Gjedrem said in a statement. In Norway, the "economy has picked up more rapidly than expected," the central bank said. It was the bank's second rate cut after a 0.25 percentage point reduction on June 17.
Copyright DPA
|
|
|
|
|
|
Related News
Singapore man gets 14 years in jail for Ponzi-style scam Singapore - A Singapore court on Wednesday sentenced a fraudster who cheated 13.4 million Singapore dollars (10.3 million US dollars) out of investors in a Ponzi-style scam to 14 years in jail, a media report said. Lee Hock Chye, also known as Jon, 3...
Taiwan signs financial pact with China Taipei - Taiwan signed a financial service agreement with China late Monday in a long-awaited move to boost cross-strait financial investments in the future. Our two sides signed the financial memorandum of understanding at the same time on Monday, ...
IMF chief predicts stronger Asian currencies Singapore - The head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Friday predicted a revaluation of major Asian currencies against the dollar as a rebalancing of the world's economy gets underway. I expect that in the coming years the revaluation o...
More than 5,000 overseas millionaires seek residency in Hong Kong Hong Kong - Around 1,000 US dollar millionaires a year are settling in the former British colony of Hong Kong under a residency scheme for rich migrants, officials said Thursday. Since 2004, the city of 7 million has allowed people to obtain residenc...
Taiwan bars foreign investor money in time deposits Taipei - Taiwan on Tuesday barred foreign investors from putting money in time deposits in a bid to prevent currency speculation and to channel foreign funds into the stock market. Under the bank taking immediate effect, foreign investors cannot put ...
Poland want to cut budget deficit by reducing pension payments Warsaw - Poland wants to reduce its deficit by reducing payments to private pension funds while keeping that money in the state's social insurance company ZUS, the Finance Ministry said Wednesday. Under the proposal, private pension funds would recei...
IMF unfreezes standby loan after Serbia promises spending cuts Belgrade - The International Monetary Fund (IMF) will unfreeze funds from a 4-billion-dollar standby loan to Serbia, which in return must curb spending and reform its social care system, officials said Wednesday in Belgrade. The head of the IMF missi...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|