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The Central Bank of Ireland was founded on 1 February 1943, and since 1 January 1972 has been the banker of the Government of Ireland in accordance with the Central Bank Act 1971, [3] which can be seen in legislative terms as completing the long transition from a currency board to a fully functional central bank. [4]
No. 7/1961 – Mental Treatment Act 1961; No. 8/1961 – Central Bank Act 1961; No. 9/1961 – Central Fund Act 1961; No. 10/1961 – Imposition of Duties (Confirmation of Orders) Act 1961; No. 11/1961 – Juries Act 1961; No. 12/1961 – Poisons Act 1961; No. 13/1961 – Agricultural Credit Act 1961; No. 14/1961 – Pigs and Bacon (Amendment ...
The Financial Regulators HQ in Dame Street. The regulator was established on 1 May 2003 by the Central Bank and Financial Services Authority of Ireland Act, 2003. [9] The regulator was a distinct element of the Central Bank and Financial Services Authority of Ireland with clearly defined regulatory responsibilities which covered all Irish financial institutions, including those previously ...
Central Bank of Ireland (1 C, ... Food Safety Authority of Ireland; Free sale, fixity of tenure, and fair rent ... Act 2018 This page was last ...
The Central Fund (Irish: Príomh-Chiste) [1] is the main accounting fund used by the government of Ireland. [2] [3] It is a bank account held at the Central Bank of Ireland, managed by the Minister for Finance as head of the Department of Finance. [2] It is informally called the exchequer (an Státchiste) by analogy with the UK Exchequer. [2] [4]
Patrick Honohan (born 9 October 1949) is an Irish economist and public servant who served as the Governor of the Central Bank of Ireland from 2009 to 2015 (and as such was a member of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank). He has been a nonresident senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics since 2016.
Issues like central bank independence, central bank policies and rhetoric in central bank governors discourse or the premises of macroeconomic policies [9] (monetary and fiscal policy) of the state are a focus of contention and criticism by some policymakers, [10] researchers [11] and specialized business, economics and finance media. [12] [13]
On 28 November 2010, European Commission, European Central Bank (ECB) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), colloquially called the European Troika, agreed with the Irish government in a three-year financial aid programme on the condition of far-reaching austerity measures to be imposed on the Irish society in order to cut government expenditure.