Money Supply
Financial Times

ft.com > Comment > Blogs >

Money Supply

Advanced search
Sign in Site tour Register Subscribe
Welcome Subscribe Your account Site tour Sign out
Forgot password?

"Remember me" uses a cookie. View our Cookie Policy.

  • Home 
    • Video
    • Interactive
    • Blogs
    • News feed
    • Alphaville
    • beyondbrics
    • Portfolio
    • Special Reports
    • In depth
    • Today’s Newspaper
  • UK 
    • Business
    • Economy
    • UK Companies
    • Politics & Policy
    • UK Small Companies
  • World 
    • Africa
    • Asia-Pacific
    • Europe
    • Latin America & Caribbean
    • Middle East & North Africa
    • UK
    • US & Canada
    • The World Blog
  • Companies 
    • Energy
    • Financials
    • Health
    • Industrials
    • Luxury 360
    • Media
    • Retail & Consumer
    • Tech
    • Telecoms
    • Transport
    • By Region
  • Markets 
    • fastFT
    • Alphaville
    • FTfm
    • Markets Data
    • Trading Room
    • Equities
    • Currencies
    • Capital Mkts
    • Commodities
    • Emerging Mkts
  • Global Economy 
    • Economic Calendar
    • Money Supply
    • Americas
    • China
    • EU
    • India
    • Middle East
    • UK
    • US
  • Lex 
    • Lex In depth
    • Lex Video
    • Best of Lex
    • About Lex
    • Lex Biographies
    • Lexicon
    • Lex on Mobile
    • Lex by Email
    • Subscribe to Lex
  • Comment 
    • Columnists
      • Columnists
      • Samuel Brittan
      • Christopher Caldwell
      • Janan Ganesh
      • John Gapper
      • Chris Giles
      • Brian Groom
      • John Kay
      • Edward Luce
      • Sebastian Mallaby
      • Jurek Martin
      • Wolfgang Munchau
      • David Pilling
      • Ingram Pinn
      • Gideon Rachman
      • Robert Shrimsley
      • Gary Silverman
      • Philip Stephens
      • Lawrence Summers
      • Gillian Tett
      • Martin Wolf
    • Analysis
    • Opinion
    • The A-List
    • Editorial
    • Blogs
      • Blogs
      • beyondbrics
      • Brussels Blog
      • Business Blog
      • Economists’ Forum
      • FT Alphaville
      • FT Data
      • FT Long Short
      • FT Photo Diary
      • Gavyn Davies
      • Martin Wolf’s Exchange
      • Material World
      • MBA Blog
      • Money Supply
      • Nick Butler
      • Tech Blog
      • The World Blog
      • Westminster Blog
    • Letters
    • Corrections
    • Obituaries
    • Tools
      • Tools
      • Topics
      • Portfolio
      • FT clippings
      • Alerts hub
      • Email briefings
      • MBA rankings
      • Newslines
      • FT Lexicon
      • Mobile
      • Currency converter
      • FT ebooks
      • ePaper
      • Executive jobs
      • FT press cuttings
      • Social Media hub
      • Economic calendar
  • Management 
    • Business Education
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Business Books
    • Business Travel
    • Recruitment
    • The Connected Business
  • Personal Finance 
    • Property & Mortgages
    • Investments
    • Pensions
    • Tax
    • Banking & Savings
    • Money Matters
    • Advice & Comment
    • Calculators
  • Life & Arts 
    • Arts
    • FT Magazine
    • Food & Drink
    • House & Home
    • Style
    • Books
    • Pursuits
    • Travel
    • Columnists
    • How To Spend It

Permalink
Share
Share this on
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
Clip
Print
Email

Money Supply

Central bank blog

About this blog Blog guide
Welcome. If you have yet to register on FT.com you will be asked to do so before you begin to read FT blogs. However, our posts remain free.

Opinions on market-moving economics and central banks around the world.

Subscribe to the RSS feed

Follow @moneysupply

To comment, please register for free with FT.com. Read our policy on comments and include your name when submitting a comment.

All posts are published in UK time.

Contact claire.jones@ft.com about the Money Supply blog.

See the full list of FT blogs.

The Money Supply team

Chris GilesChris Giles has been the economics editor of the Financial Times since 2004. Based in London, he writes about international economic trends and the British economy. Before reporting economics for the Financial Times, he wrote editorials for the paper, reported for the BBC, worked as a regulator of the broadcasting industry and undertook research for the Institute for Fiscal Studies. RSS

Michael Steen, Frankfurt bureau chief, covers the ECB and the eurozone's economies. He joined the Financial Times in 2007 as Amsterdam correspondent and later worked as a front page news editor in London. Before joining the FT, he spent nine years as a correspondent at Reuters, mostly in foreign postings that included a previous stint in Frankfurt, as well as Moscow, Kiev and central Asia. He read German and Russian at Cambridge.RSS

Robin Harding is the FT's US economics editor, based in Washington. Prior to this, he was based in Tokyo, covering the Bank of Japan and Japan's technology sector, and in London as an economics leader writer. Robin studied economics at Cambridge and has a masters in economics from Hitotsubashi University, where he was a Monbusho scholar. Before joining the FT, Robin worked in asset management and banking. RSS

Ralph Atkins, capital markets editor, has been writing for the Financial Times for more than 20 years following an economics degree from Cambridge. From 2004 to 2012, Ralph was Frankfurt bureau chief, watching the European Central Bank and eurozone economies. He has also worked in Bonn, Berlin, Jerusalem and Brussels. RSS

Claire Jones is Money Supply economics team writer, based in London. Before joining the Financial Times, she was the editor of the Central Banking journal and CentralBanking.com. Claire studied philosophy and economics at the London School of Economics. RSS

Editor’s choice

Andrew Haldane

Unbundling the banks

Gavyn Davies

Fed policy at a turning point

Most popular posts

  1. Reading the jobs report through the Fed’s eyes
  2. You can take my Pfennigs, but the cent stays
  3. Key points from the ECB press conference
  4. Inflation report in five bites
  5. Janet Yellen and the Fed’s labour market dashboard

Most commented posts

  1. Early bird specials and US growth

Categories

Bank of Canada Bank of England Bundesbank Central banks European Central Bank European Union (EU) Federal Reserve International Monetary Fund Reserve Bank of Australia UK Parliament Uncategorized

Tags

ECB federal reserve GDP George Osborne inflation Mark Carney QE3 Sir Mervyn King unemployment

Archive

« MayJune 2013
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Blogroll

  • Abnormal Returns
  • Accrued Interest
  • Bradford de Long
  • Calculated Risk
  • CEPR > Beat the Press
  • CFR > Geographics
  • Econbrowser
  • Economic principals
  • Economist > Buttonwood
  • Economist > Free Exchange
  • Economists’ View
  • Financial Armageddon
  • FT > Alphaville
  • FT > Gavyn Davies
  • Greg Mankiw
  • iMF Direct
  • Liberty Street Economics
  • Macro and other market musings
  • Macroblog
  • Marginal Revolution
  • Naked capitalism
  • NYT > Economix
  • Oxford SWF project
  • Paul Kedrosky > Infectious greed
  • PIIE > Real time
  • Reuters > Macroscope
  • The Big Picture
  • VoxEU
  • WSJ > Real Time Economics
  • Zero Hedge
  • Help
  • •Contact us
  • •About us
  • •Sitemap
  • •Advertise with the FT
  • •Terms & conditions
  • •Privacy policy
  • •Copyright
  • •Cookie policy

© The Financial Times Ltd 2013 FT and 'Financial Times' are trademarks of The Financial Times Ltd.