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Bank of France

The Bank of France (French: Banque de France) is the French member of the Eurosystem. The bank doesn't translate its name to English and uses its French name Banque de France in all English communications. The bank was established by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1800 as a private-sector corporation with unique public status. Charles de Gaulle's government nationalized the bank in 1945 after several governance changes in the meantime. The Bank of France was granted note-issuance monopoly in Paris in 1803 and in the entire country in 1848, issuing the French franc. It remained France's sole monetary authority until end-1998, when France adopted the euro as its currency.

Bank of France
Banque de France
HeadquartersParis, France
Established18 January 1800; 224 years ago (18 January 1800)
Ownership100% owned by French Government[1]
GovernorFrançois Villeroy de Galhau
Central bank ofFrance
Websitewww.banque-france.fr

The Bank of France long held high prestige as an anchor of financial stability, especially before the monetary turmoil that followed World War I. In 1907, Italian economist and statesman Luigi Luzzatti referred to the Bank of France as "the centre of the world's monetary power."[2]: 21 

The French framework for banking supervision was initiated by the Vichy Government in 1941 and entrusted from the start to a separate body under the aegis of the Bank of France, which in 2013 became the French Prudential Supervision and Resolution Authority (French acronym ACPR).

History edit

Background edit

The Kingdom of France's first experiment with a central bank was the Banque Générale (Banque Générale Privée or "General Private Bank"), set up by John Law at the behest of the Duke of Orléans after the death of Louis XIV. Law received the bank's 20-year charter in May 1716 and its stock consisted of 1,200 shares valued at 5,000 livres apiece.[3] It was meant to stimulate France's stagnant economy and pay down its staggering national debt acquired from Louis XIV's wars, including the War of the Spanish Succession. It was nationalized in December 1718 at Law's request and formally renamed the Banque Royale a month later.[4] It saw great initial success, increasing industry 60% in two years, but Law's mercantilist policies saw him seek to establish large monopolies, leading to the Mississippi bubble. The bubble would ultimately burst in 1720, and on 27 November of that year, the Banque Royale officially closed.[5]

The collapse of the Mississippi Company and the Banque Royale tarnished the word banque ("bank") so much that France abandoned central banking for almost a century, possibly precipitating Louis XVI's economic crisis and the French Revolution. Successors such as the Caisse d'Escompte (from 1776 to 1793) and Caisse d'escompte du commerce (from 1797 to 1803) used the word "caisse" instead, until Napoleon retook the term with la Banque de France ("Bank of France") in 1800.

Creation edit

In 1803, financial power in France was in the hands of fifteen members of the Haute Banque, when the shareholders' meeting ratified the appointment of a “Council of Regency” composed of Jean-Frédéric Perregaux, Guillaume Mallet [fr], Jean-Barthélemy Le Couteulx de Canteleu, Joseph Hugues-Lagarde [fr], Jacques-Rose Récamier, Jean-Pierre Germain [fr], Carié-Bézard [fr], Pierre-Léon Basterrèche [fr], Jean-Auguste Sévène [fr], Alexandre Barrillon [fr], Georges-Antoine Ricard [fr], Georges-Victor Demautort [fr], Claude Perier, Pierre-Nicolas Perrée-Duhamel [fr], Jacques-Florent Robillard [fr], and Jean-Conrad Hottinguer. These powerful bankers, representative of the financial elite that would become referred to in France as the Haute banque, were deeply involved in the agitations leading up to the French Revolution.[citation needed] When the revolutionary violence got out of hand, they orchestrated the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte, whom they regarded as the restorer of order. As a reward for their support, Napoleon, in 1800, gave the bankers a monopoly over French finance by giving them control of the new Bank of France (Banque de France).[6] Banker Claude Perier drafted the first statutes and Emmanuel Crétet was the first governor of the Bank.

On 14 April 1803, the new Bank received its first official charter granting it the exclusive right to issue paper money in Paris for fifteen years.[7]

Development edit

On 22 April 1806, a new law replaced the Central Committee with a Governor and two Deputy Governors. All three were appointed by the Emperor.[7] On 16 January 1808, a decree set out the "Basic Statutes", which were to govern the Bank's operations until 1936.[7]

For the first fifteen years, the Bank of France was the sole issuer of bank notes in Paris, and this privilege was extended to other financially important cities and the rest of the country by 1848.[8]

The Bank was also instrumental in the creation of the Latin Monetary Union (LMU) in 1865. The countries of France, Belgium, Italy, and the Swiss Confederation established the LMU franc as a common bimetallic currency.

In World War I, the Bank sold short-term Treasury bonds abroad to help pay for wartime expenditures. France abandoned the gold standard shortly after the outbreak of war. Debts amounted to approximately 42 billion francs by 1919. Following the war, the Bank sought to re-establish the gold standard and acquired capital from a number of American and British banking syndicates to defend the franc from exchange-rate fluctuations. The Bank also began to hoard gold reserves and, at its peak, held 28.3 percent of the world's gold stock (only behind the United States at 30.4 percent). Some scholars have asserted that this gold accumulation was a contributing factor to the Great Depression.[9][10][11] Under Émile Moreau, Governor from 1926 to 1930, the Bank consolidated gold reserves created a stabilization insurance fund (fonds de stabilisation), and tested new monetary policies in the wake of a global depression.

In World War II, the Bank oversaw the transfer of gold reserves overseas, which mainly included Canada, the United States, and the French overseas territories. In 1945, the Bank was nationalized by Charles de Gaulle and became a state-owned institution.[12] Existing shareholders received bonds to replace their shares in the company.[citation needed] The Bank's statute was reformed in 1973.[citation needed]

In 1993, the Bank of France was again reformed when it obtained independence from the state. It sought to establish credibility by promising to adhere to the single mandate of price stability. Jean-Claude Trichet, Governor from 1993 to 2003, was the final Governor of the Bank until the establishment of the European Central Bank (ECB) in June 1998. Today, the ECB sets monetary policy and oversees price stability for all countries in the Eurozone, including France.[citation needed]

 
ATM of the Bank of France in Paris.

On 1 June 1998, a new institution was created, the European Central Bank (ECB), charged with steering the single monetary policy for the euro. The body formed by the ECB, and the national central banks (NCB) of all the member states of the European Union, constitute the European System of Central Banks (ESCB). According to the Maastrict Treaty, the Bank would oversee the functioning of the payment system and conduct independent research on the French economy, while the newly established European Central Bank conducted monetary policy for the entire Eurozone. The French franc was replaced by the Euro on 1 January 1999.

Following the financial crisis of 2007-2008, the Bank of France implemented quantitative easing for the account of the ECB.[13]

In 2010, the French government's Autorité de la concurrence (the department in charge of regulating competition) fined eleven banks, including Bank of France, the sum of €384,900,000 for colluding to charge unjustified fees on check processing, especially for extra fees charged during the transition from paper check transfer to "Exchanges Check-Image" electronic transfer.[14][15]

The Bank recently established a "Lab", located on the Rue Réaumur in Paris, where start-ups and small businesses work on blockchain, artificial intelligence, and virtual reality. The Bank is the first to set up a blockchain system.

With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and the ensuing economic crisis, the Eurosystem resolved to inject €3 trillion of liquidity into banks, allowing them in turn to support households and businesses, particularly with regard to urgent cash flow needs.[16] In addition to membership in the Eurosystem, the Banque de France is in charge of credit mediation.[17] This service, which has been in very high demand during the crisis, provides assistance to companies facing difficulties in their relations with financial institutions. The Banque de France manages procedures to resolve overindebtedness, and while its premises are no longer open to the public, requests continue to be processed.[16]

Activities edit

The Bank of France describes itself as responsible for three missions: monetary strategy, financial stability, and services to the economy.[18][19]

Monetary policy edit

The Bank of France contributes to the design of the monetary policy of the euro zone, through macroeconomic research and forecast and by taking part in the deliberations on ECB decisions, and implements it in France. It prints euro bank notes, in larger volumes than any of its Eurosystem peers, and manages the circulation of bank notes and coins. It also participates in the fight against counterfeit money, by training bank employees, merchants, police, and other stakeholders. It manages part of the foreign exchange reserves of the ECB.

Financial stability edit

The Bank of France participates in the prudential oversight of the French financial sector through the Prudential Supervision and Resolution Authority (ACPR) which operates under its aegis. In 2018, the French financial sector was composed of 777 banks and 827 insurance and mutual insurance companies. It also monitors payment systems and means, and publishes a periodical Financial Stability Review (Revue de la Stabilité Financière).

Services to the economy edit

The Bank of France provides services to households, businesses, and the French state:

  • It is in charge of offering services to households in severe financial difficulty. This includes the management of over-indebtedness (one of the major tasks of the local branches of the bank), and the guarantee to an access to basic banking services for everyone, such as the right to a basic bank account. It is also in charge of financial and economic education of the general public, by developing an economic culture among specific populations (like youngsters and households in severe financial difficulty). This includes sensitizing high school students, providing online information and educational services, training social workers and the launch of the French Cité de l'économie et de la monnaie (Citéco), a museum based in the 17th district of Paris, in 2019.
  • It provides company ratings for non-listed companies, which can for instance be used by business leaders to obtain credit from their bank. It also manages credit mediation (mediation between companies and their banks, their credit insurers, etc.) and proposes support to very small businesses (advice for their development and needs). The Bank of France publishes a number of economic surveys, national and regional statistics, destined to businesses.

Governance edit

The governor of the Bank of France is appointed by the president and is, as of 2019, François Villeroy de Galhau, since 1 November 2015. He presides over the Bank's General Council, the body responsible for deliberating on all matters relating to non-Eurosystem activities. As of late 2023, the first deputy governor was Denis Beau [fr] and the second deputy governor was Agnès Bénassy-Quéré.

Key figures edit

In 2019, the main key figures of the Bank of France are as follows:[20]

  • Number of full-time employees: 9,857
  • Regional branches: 95
  • Profit before tax : 6.5 billion euros
  • Dividend distributed to the French state : 6.1 billion euros
  • Gold reserves: 106.1 billion euros
  • Gold stock in France: 2,436 tons

The Bank distributed dividends to the French state of 4.5 billion euros in 2016, 5.0 billion euros in 2017 and 6.1 billion euros in 2019.

Buildings edit

A decree on 6 March 1808 authorized the Bank to purchase the former mansion of the Count of Toulouse in the rue de la Vrillière in Paris for its headquarters.[7] The bank's head office subsequently expanded from that original property, through the acquisition and remodeling of adjacent buildings and in the surrounding neighborhood. A major expansion occurred in 1924-1927 as part of an urban renewal project that entailed the demolition of several historical buildings and the creation of a new thoroughfare, the rue du Colonel-Driant [fr]. It entailed the erection of a new complex for the bank above a large underground bunker known as the Souterraine [fr], designed by architect Alphonse Defrasse.

The Bank of France commissioned the erection of branches in many French towns and cities, which are often prominent in the urban landscape.

In 2019, the bank opened its museum, the Cité de l'économie et de la monnaie, in a former branch in the 17th arrondissement of Paris. This followed comparable initiatives in Europe such as the Museum of the National Bank of Belgium (opened 1982), the Bank of England Museum (1988), and the Bundesbank Money Museum [de] (1999).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Weidner, Jan (2017). "The Organisation and Structure of Central Banks" (PDF). Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek.
  2. ^ Gianni Toniolo (2005). Central Bank Cooperation at the Bank for International Settlements, 1930-1973. Cambridge University Press.
  3. ^ Gleeson, Janet (2001). Millionaire: The Philanderer, Gambler, and Duelist Who Invented Modern Finance. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 114. ISBN 978-0684872957.
  4. ^ Gleeson, Janet (2001). Millionaire: The Philanderer, Gambler, and Duelist Who Invented Modern Finance. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 132. ISBN 978-0684872957.
  5. ^ Gleeson, Janet (2001). Millionaire: The Philanderer, Gambler, and Duelist Who Invented Modern Finance. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 225. ISBN 978-0684872957.
  6. ^ Quigley, Carroll (1966). Tragedy And Hope. New York: Macmillan. p. 515. ISBN 0-945001-10-X.
  7. ^ a b c d "Page de recherche".
  8. ^ Bank of France, Encyclopædia Britannica
  9. ^ Irwin, Douglas A. (PDF). Dartmouth College. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 October 2018. Retrieved 17 October 2018.
  10. ^ Metzler, Mark. Lever of Empire: The International Gold Standard and the Crisis of Liberalism in Prewar Japan. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
  11. ^ Yee, Robert. "The Bank of France and the Gold Dependency: Observations on the Bank's Weekly Balance Sheets and Reserves, 1898–1940" (PDF). Johns Hopkins University. Studies in Applied Economics.
  12. ^ "The history of the Banque de France | Banque de France".
  13. ^ 3rd Inspecting the Mechanism of Quantitative Easing in the Euro Area, Ralph S.J. Koijen, François Koulischer, Benoît Nguyen & Motohiro Yogo, February 2018
  14. ^ Collusion in the banking sector, Press Release of Autorité de la concurrence, République Française, 20 September 2010, retrv 20 September 2010
  15. ^ 3rd UPDATE: French Watchdog Fines 11 Banks For Fee Cartel [permanent dead link], Elena Bertson, Dow Jones News Wires / Wall Street Journal online, retrieved 20 September 2010
  16. ^ a b "Comment la Banque de France agit-elle pour soutenir l'économie face à la crise sanitaire du Covid-19 ?". Covid-19 et économie, les clés pour comprendre – Banque de France (in French). 6 April 2020. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  17. ^ "Quel rôle pour la Médiation du crédit ?". Covid-19 et économie, les clés pour comprendre – Banque de France (in French). 6 April 2020. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  18. ^ "Missions". 8 December 2016.
  19. ^ "Annual report 2017" (PDF). Bank of France. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
  20. ^ "Annual Report 2019". Banque de France (in French). 31 July 2020. Retrieved 18 December 2020.

Further reading edit

  • Accominotti, Olivier. "The Sterling Trap: Foreign Reserves Management at the Bank of France, 1928-19". European Review of Economic History 13, No. 3 (2009). [1]
  • Baubeau, Patrice. "The Bank of France's balance sheets database, 1840–1998: an introduction to 158 years of central banking." Financial History Review 25, No. 2 (2018). [2]
  • Bazot, Guillaume, Michael D. Bordo, and Eric Monnet. "The Price of Stability: The Balance Sheet Policy of the Banque de France and the Gold Standard (1880–1914)." NBER Working Papers. Number 20554. October 2014. [3]
  • Bignon, Vincent and Marc Flandreau. "The Other Way: A Narrative History of Banque de France." In Sveriges Riksbank and the History of Central Banking, eds. Tor Jacobson and Daniel Waldenstrom. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018.
  • Bordo, Michael D. and Pierre-Cyrille Hautcoeur. "Why Didn't France Follow the British Stabilisation after World War I?" European Review of Economic History 11, no. 1 (2007): 3–37.
  • Bouvier, Jean. "The Banque de France and the State from 1850 to the Present Day." in Fausto Vicarelli, et al. eds., Central banks' independence in historical perspective (Walter de Gruyter, 1988) pp. 73–104.
  • Du Camp, Maxime and Raphael-Georges Lévy. La Banque de France et son Histoire. Mono, 2017.
  • Duchaussoy, Vincent. "Une Banque publique ? 1936 ou la mutation initiée de la Banque de France." Revue historique 681 (2017): 55–72.
  • Flandreau, Marc. "Central Bank Cooperation in Historical Perspective: A Sceptical View." The Economic History Review, New Series, 50, no. 4 (1997): 735–63. [www.jstor.org/stable/2599884]
  • Flandreau, Marc, 1996b, The French Crime of 1873: An Essay on the Emergence of the International Gold Standard,
  • Flandreau, Marc. The Glitter of Gold: France, Bimetallism, and the Emergence of the International Gold Standard, 1848–1873. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.
  • Flandreau, Marc. "Was the Latin Monetary Union a Franc Zone?." In International Monetary Systems in Historical Perspective, ed. J. Reis (1995).
  • Gille, Bertrand. La Banque en France au xixe siècle : recherches historiques, Genève: Droz, 1970.
  • Gleeson, Janet (2001). Millionaire: The Philanderer, Gambler, and Duelist Who Invented Modern Finance. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0684872957.
  • Irwin, Douglas A. "The French Gold Sink and the Great Deflation of 1929–32." Dartmouth College. [4] 19 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  • Leclercq, Yves. La Banque supérieure : La Banque de France de 1800 à 1914. Paris, Éditions Classique Garnier, 2010.
  • Monnet, Éric. Controlling Credit: Central Banking and the Planned Economy in Postwar France, 1948–1973. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018.
  • Mouré, Kenneth. Managing the Franc Poincaré: Economic Understanding and Political Constraint in French Monetary Policy, 1928–1936. Cambridge University Press (1991).
  • Nishimura, Shizuya. "The French Provincial Banks, the Banque De France, and Bill Finance, 1890–1913." The Economic History Review, New Series, 48, no. 3 (1995): 536–54
  • Jacoud, Gilles. "Crises et Apprentissage: La Banque de France en 1848," Entreprises et Histoire (Dec. 2012) Issue 69, pp 27–37
  • Plessis, Alain. "The history of banks in France." in Pohl, Manfred, and Sabine Freitag, eds. Handbook on the history of European banks (Edward Elgar Publishing, 1994) pp: 185–296. online
  • Plessis, Alain. Histoires de la Banque de France. Paris: Albin Michel, 2015.
  • Plessis, Alain. La Banque de France et ses deux cents actionnaires sous le Second Empire. Geneva: Droz, 1982.
  • Servais, Édmond. La Banque de France. Son histoire, son organisation, ses opérations. Cours Servais, 1949.
  • Sicsic, Pierre. "Was the franc poincare deliberately undervalued?," Explorations in Economic History 29(1) (1992): 69–92.* Szramkiewicz, Romuald. Les Régents et censeurs de la Banque de France nommés sous le Consulat et l'Empire. Genève: Droz, 1974.
  • Yee, Robert. "The Bank of France and the Gold Dependency: Observations on the Bank's Weekly Balance Sheets and Reserves, 1898–1940." Johns Hopkins University: Studies in Applied Economics. No. 128. [5]

External links edit

  • (in French and English) Official site of Bank of France
  • (in French) Beginnings of Banque de France The directors of Bank of France between 1800 and 1815.

48°51′52″N 2°20′21″E / 48.864478°N 2.339289°E / 48.864478; 2.339289

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The Bank of France French Banque de France is the French member of the Eurosystem The bank doesn t translate its name to English and uses its French name Banque de France in all English communications The bank was established by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1800 as a private sector corporation with unique public status Charles de Gaulle s government nationalized the bank in 1945 after several governance changes in the meantime The Bank of France was granted note issuance monopoly in Paris in 1803 and in the entire country in 1848 issuing the French franc It remained France s sole monetary authority until end 1998 when France adopted the euro as its currency Bank of FranceBanque de FranceHeadquartersParis FranceEstablished18 January 1800 224 years ago 18 January 1800 Ownership100 owned by French Government 1 GovernorFrancois Villeroy de GalhauCentral bank ofFranceWebsitewww banque france frThe Bank of France long held high prestige as an anchor of financial stability especially before the monetary turmoil that followed World War I In 1907 Italian economist and statesman Luigi Luzzatti referred to the Bank of France as the centre of the world s monetary power 2 21 The French framework for banking supervision was initiated by the Vichy Government in 1941 and entrusted from the start to a separate body under the aegis of the Bank of France which in 2013 became the French Prudential Supervision and Resolution Authority French acronym ACPR Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Creation 1 3 Development 2 Activities 2 1 Monetary policy 2 2 Financial stability 2 3 Services to the economy 3 Governance 4 Key figures 5 Buildings 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editBackground edit The Kingdom of France s first experiment with a central bank was the Banque Generale Banque Generale Privee or General Private Bank set up by John Law at the behest of the Duke of Orleans after the death of Louis XIV Law received the bank s 20 year charter in May 1716 and its stock consisted of 1 200 shares valued at 5 000 livres apiece 3 It was meant to stimulate France s stagnant economy and pay down its staggering national debt acquired from Louis XIV s wars including the War of the Spanish Succession It was nationalized in December 1718 at Law s request and formally renamed the Banque Royale a month later 4 It saw great initial success increasing industry 60 in two years but Law s mercantilist policies saw him seek to establish large monopolies leading to the Mississippi bubble The bubble would ultimately burst in 1720 and on 27 November of that year the Banque Royale officially closed 5 The collapse of the Mississippi Company and the Banque Royale tarnished the word banque bank so much that France abandoned central banking for almost a century possibly precipitating Louis XVI s economic crisis and the French Revolution Successors such as the Caisse d Escompte from 1776 to 1793 and Caisse d escompte du commerce from 1797 to 1803 used the word caisse instead until Napoleon retook the term with la Banque de France Bank of France in 1800 Creation edit In 1803 financial power in France was in the hands of fifteen members of the Haute Banque when the shareholders meeting ratified the appointment of a Council of Regency composed of Jean Frederic Perregaux Guillaume Mallet fr Jean Barthelemy Le Couteulx de Canteleu Joseph Hugues Lagarde fr Jacques Rose Recamier Jean Pierre Germain fr Carie Bezard fr Pierre Leon Basterreche fr Jean Auguste Sevene fr Alexandre Barrillon fr Georges Antoine Ricard fr Georges Victor Demautort fr Claude Perier Pierre Nicolas Perree Duhamel fr Jacques Florent Robillard fr and Jean Conrad Hottinguer These powerful bankers representative of the financial elite that would become referred to in France as the Haute banque were deeply involved in the agitations leading up to the French Revolution citation needed When the revolutionary violence got out of hand they orchestrated the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte whom they regarded as the restorer of order As a reward for their support Napoleon in 1800 gave the bankers a monopoly over French finance by giving them control of the new Bank of France Banque de France 6 Banker Claude Perier drafted the first statutes and Emmanuel Cretet was the first governor of the Bank On 14 April 1803 the new Bank received its first official charter granting it the exclusive right to issue paper money in Paris for fifteen years 7 Development edit On 22 April 1806 a new law replaced the Central Committee with a Governor and two Deputy Governors All three were appointed by the Emperor 7 On 16 January 1808 a decree set out the Basic Statutes which were to govern the Bank s operations until 1936 7 For the first fifteen years the Bank of France was the sole issuer of bank notes in Paris and this privilege was extended to other financially important cities and the rest of the country by 1848 8 The Bank was also instrumental in the creation of the Latin Monetary Union LMU in 1865 The countries of France Belgium Italy and the Swiss Confederation established the LMU franc as a common bimetallic currency In World War I the Bank sold short term Treasury bonds abroad to help pay for wartime expenditures France abandoned the gold standard shortly after the outbreak of war Debts amounted to approximately 42 billion francs by 1919 Following the war the Bank sought to re establish the gold standard and acquired capital from a number of American and British banking syndicates to defend the franc from exchange rate fluctuations The Bank also began to hoard gold reserves and at its peak held 28 3 percent of the world s gold stock only behind the United States at 30 4 percent Some scholars have asserted that this gold accumulation was a contributing factor to the Great Depression 9 10 11 Under Emile Moreau Governor from 1926 to 1930 the Bank consolidated gold reserves created a stabilization insurance fund fonds de stabilisation and tested new monetary policies in the wake of a global depression In World War II the Bank oversaw the transfer of gold reserves overseas which mainly included Canada the United States and the French overseas territories In 1945 the Bank was nationalized by Charles de Gaulle and became a state owned institution 12 Existing shareholders received bonds to replace their shares in the company citation needed The Bank s statute was reformed in 1973 citation needed In 1993 the Bank of France was again reformed when it obtained independence from the state It sought to establish credibility by promising to adhere to the single mandate of price stability Jean Claude Trichet Governor from 1993 to 2003 was the final Governor of the Bank until the establishment of the European Central Bank ECB in June 1998 Today the ECB sets monetary policy and oversees price stability for all countries in the Eurozone including France citation needed nbsp ATM of the Bank of France in Paris On 1 June 1998 a new institution was created the European Central Bank ECB charged with steering the single monetary policy for the euro The body formed by the ECB and the national central banks NCB of all the member states of the European Union constitute the European System of Central Banks ESCB According to the Maastrict Treaty the Bank would oversee the functioning of the payment system and conduct independent research on the French economy while the newly established European Central Bank conducted monetary policy for the entire Eurozone The French franc was replaced by the Euro on 1 January 1999 Following the financial crisis of 2007 2008 the Bank of France implemented quantitative easing for the account of the ECB 13 In 2010 the French government s Autorite de la concurrence the department in charge of regulating competition fined eleven banks including Bank of France the sum of 384 900 000 for colluding to charge unjustified fees on check processing especially for extra fees charged during the transition from paper check transfer to Exchanges Check Image electronic transfer 14 15 The Bank recently established a Lab located on the Rue Reaumur in Paris where start ups and small businesses work on blockchain artificial intelligence and virtual reality The Bank is the first to set up a blockchain system With the onset of the COVID 19 pandemic and the ensuing economic crisis the Eurosystem resolved to inject 3 trillion of liquidity into banks allowing them in turn to support households and businesses particularly with regard to urgent cash flow needs 16 In addition to membership in the Eurosystem the Banque de France is in charge of credit mediation 17 This service which has been in very high demand during the crisis provides assistance to companies facing difficulties in their relations with financial institutions The Banque de France manages procedures to resolve overindebtedness and while its premises are no longer open to the public requests continue to be processed 16 Activities editThe Bank of France describes itself as responsible for three missions monetary strategy financial stability and services to the economy 18 19 Monetary policy edit The Bank of France contributes to the design of the monetary policy of the euro zone through macroeconomic research and forecast and by taking part in the deliberations on ECB decisions and implements it in France It prints euro bank notes in larger volumes than any of its Eurosystem peers and manages the circulation of bank notes and coins It also participates in the fight against counterfeit money by training bank employees merchants police and other stakeholders It manages part of the foreign exchange reserves of the ECB Financial stability edit The Bank of France participates in the prudential oversight of the French financial sector through the Prudential Supervision and Resolution Authority ACPR which operates under its aegis In 2018 the French financial sector was composed of 777 banks and 827 insurance and mutual insurance companies It also monitors payment systems and means and publishes a periodical Financial Stability Review Revue de la Stabilite Financiere Services to the economy edit The Bank of France provides services to households businesses and the French state It is in charge of offering services to households in severe financial difficulty This includes the management of over indebtedness one of the major tasks of the local branches of the bank and the guarantee to an access to basic banking services for everyone such as the right to a basic bank account It is also in charge of financial and economic education of the general public by developing an economic culture among specific populations like youngsters and households in severe financial difficulty This includes sensitizing high school students providing online information and educational services training social workers and the launch of the French Cite de l economie et de la monnaie Citeco a museum based in the 17th district of Paris in 2019 It provides company ratings for non listed companies which can for instance be used by business leaders to obtain credit from their bank It also manages credit mediation mediation between companies and their banks their credit insurers etc and proposes support to very small businesses advice for their development and needs The Bank of France publishes a number of economic surveys national and regional statistics destined to businesses Governance editThe governor of the Bank of France is appointed by the president and is as of 2019 Francois Villeroy de Galhau since 1 November 2015 He presides over the Bank s General Council the body responsible for deliberating on all matters relating to non Eurosystem activities As of late 2023 the first deputy governor was Denis Beau fr and the second deputy governor was Agnes Benassy Quere Key figures editIn 2019 the main key figures of the Bank of France are as follows 20 Number of full time employees 9 857 Regional branches 95 Profit before tax 6 5 billion euros Dividend distributed to the French state 6 1 billion euros Gold reserves 106 1 billion euros Gold stock in France 2 436 tonsThe Bank distributed dividends to the French state of 4 5 billion euros in 2016 5 0 billion euros in 2017 and 6 1 billion euros in 2019 Buildings editA decree on 6 March 1808 authorized the Bank to purchase the former mansion of the Count of Toulouse in the rue de la Vrilliere in Paris for its headquarters 7 The bank s head office subsequently expanded from that original property through the acquisition and remodeling of adjacent buildings and in the surrounding neighborhood A major expansion occurred in 1924 1927 as part of an urban renewal project that entailed the demolition of several historical buildings and the creation of a new thoroughfare the rue du Colonel Driant fr It entailed the erection of a new complex for the bank above a large underground bunker known as the Souterraine fr designed by architect Alphonse Defrasse The Bank of France commissioned the erection of branches in many French towns and cities which are often prominent in the urban landscape In 2019 the bank opened its museum the Cite de l economie et de la monnaie in a former branch in the 17th arrondissement of Paris This followed comparable initiatives in Europe such as the Museum of the National Bank of Belgium opened 1982 the Bank of England Museum 1988 and the Bundesbank Money Museum de 1999 nbsp Facade of the Hotel de Toulouse part of the Bank of France s central complex in Paris nbsp The galerie doree prestige room inside the Hotel de Toulouse nbsp Garden of the Hotel de Toulouse inside the Bank of France s main complex nbsp Main facade of the Bank of France on Rue Croix des Petits Champs left with Hotel Portalis in the background nbsp Hotel Portalis a nearby property also owned by the Bank of France nbsp Former Salle Ventadour in Paris used by the Bank of France since 1892 nbsp Bank of France building at the corner of Rue du Bac and Rue de l Universite in Paris nbsp Bank of France building at the corner of Boulevard Raspail and Rue de Sevres in Paris nbsp Bank of France building on Place de la Bastille corner of rue Saint Antoine in Paris nbsp Hotel Gaillard in Paris lately the Bank of France s Museum nbsp Branch in Amiens nbsp Branch in Bourg en Bresse nbsp Branch in BrestSee also edit nbsp Banks portalEconomy of France French franc Governor of the Bank de France List of central banks Anti money laundering framework for financial institutions in FranceReferences edit Weidner Jan 2017 The Organisation and Structure of Central Banks PDF Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek Gianni Toniolo 2005 Central Bank Cooperation at the Bank for International Settlements 1930 1973 Cambridge University Press Gleeson Janet 2001 Millionaire The Philanderer Gambler and Duelist Who Invented Modern Finance New York Simon amp Schuster p 114 ISBN 978 0684872957 Gleeson Janet 2001 Millionaire The Philanderer Gambler and Duelist Who Invented Modern Finance New York Simon amp Schuster p 132 ISBN 978 0684872957 Gleeson Janet 2001 Millionaire The Philanderer Gambler and Duelist Who Invented Modern Finance New York Simon amp Schuster p 225 ISBN 978 0684872957 Quigley Carroll 1966 Tragedy And Hope New York Macmillan p 515 ISBN 0 945001 10 X a b c d Page de recherche Bank of France Encyclopaedia Britannica Irwin Douglas A The French Gold Sink and the Great Deflation of 1929 32 PDF Dartmouth College Archived from the original PDF on 19 October 2018 Retrieved 17 October 2018 Metzler Mark Lever of Empire The International Gold Standard and the Crisis of Liberalism in Prewar Japan Berkeley CA University of California Press Yee Robert The Bank of France and the Gold Dependency Observations on the Bank s Weekly Balance Sheets and Reserves 1898 1940 PDF Johns Hopkins University Studies in Applied Economics The history of the Banque de France Banque de France 3rd Inspecting the Mechanism of Quantitative Easing in the Euro Area Ralph S J Koijen Francois Koulischer Benoit Nguyen amp Motohiro Yogo February 2018 Collusion in the banking sector Press Release of Autorite de la concurrence Republique Francaise 20 September 2010 retrv 20 September 2010 3rd UPDATE French Watchdog Fines 11 Banks For Fee Cartel permanent dead link Elena Bertson Dow Jones News Wires Wall Street Journal online retrieved 20 September 2010 a b Comment la Banque de France agit elle pour soutenir l economie face a la crise sanitaire du Covid 19 Covid 19 et economie les cles pour comprendre Banque de France in French 6 April 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Quel role pour la Mediation du credit Covid 19 et economie les cles pour comprendre Banque de France in French 6 April 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Missions 8 December 2016 Annual report 2017 PDF Bank of France Retrieved 20 February 2023 Annual Report 2019 Banque de France in French 31 July 2020 Retrieved 18 December 2020 Further reading editAccominotti Olivier The Sterling Trap Foreign Reserves Management at the Bank of France 1928 19 European Review of Economic History 13 No 3 2009 1 Baubeau Patrice The Bank of France s balance sheets database 1840 1998 an introduction to 158 years of central banking Financial History Review 25 No 2 2018 2 Bazot Guillaume Michael D Bordo and Eric Monnet The Price of Stability The Balance Sheet Policy of the Banque de France and the Gold Standard 1880 1914 NBER Working Papers Number 20554 October 2014 3 Bignon Vincent and Marc Flandreau The Other Way A Narrative History of Banque de France In Sveriges Riksbank and the History of Central Banking eds Tor Jacobson and Daniel Waldenstrom Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2018 Bordo Michael D and Pierre Cyrille Hautcoeur Why Didn t France Follow the British Stabilisation after World War I European Review of Economic History 11 no 1 2007 3 37 Bouvier Jean The Banque de France and the State from 1850 to the Present Day in Fausto Vicarelli et al eds Central banks independence in historical perspective Walter de Gruyter 1988 pp 73 104 Du Camp Maxime and Raphael Georges Levy La Banque de France et son Histoire Mono 2017 Duchaussoy Vincent Une Banque publique 1936 ou la mutation initiee de la Banque de France Revue historique 681 2017 55 72 Flandreau Marc Central Bank Cooperation in Historical Perspective A Sceptical View The Economic History Review New Series 50 no 4 1997 735 63 www jstor org stable 2599884 Flandreau Marc 1996b The French Crime of 1873 An Essay on the Emergence of the International Gold Standard Flandreau Marc The Glitter of Gold France Bimetallism and the Emergence of the International Gold Standard 1848 1873 New York Oxford University Press 2003 Flandreau Marc Was the Latin Monetary Union a Franc Zone In International Monetary Systems in Historical Perspective ed J Reis 1995 Gille Bertrand La Banque en France au xixe siecle recherches historiques Geneve Droz 1970 Gleeson Janet 2001 Millionaire The Philanderer Gambler and Duelist Who Invented Modern Finance New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0684872957 Irwin Douglas A The French Gold Sink and the Great Deflation of 1929 32 Dartmouth College 4 Archived 19 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine Leclercq Yves La Banque superieure La Banque de France de 1800 a 1914 Paris Editions Classique Garnier 2010 Monnet Eric Controlling Credit Central Banking and the Planned Economy in Postwar France 1948 1973 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2018 Moure Kenneth Managing the Franc Poincare Economic Understanding and Political Constraint in French Monetary Policy 1928 1936 Cambridge University Press 1991 Nishimura Shizuya The French Provincial Banks the Banque De France and Bill Finance 1890 1913 The Economic History Review New Series 48 no 3 1995 536 54 Jacoud Gilles Crises et Apprentissage La Banque de France en 1848 Entreprises et Histoire Dec 2012 Issue 69 pp 27 37 Plessis Alain The history of banks in France in Pohl Manfred and Sabine Freitag eds Handbook on the history of European banks Edward Elgar Publishing 1994 pp 185 296 online Plessis Alain Histoires de la Banque de France Paris Albin Michel 2015 Plessis Alain La Banque de France et ses deux cents actionnaires sous le Second Empire Geneva Droz 1982 Servais Edmond La Banque de France Son histoire son organisation ses operations Cours Servais 1949 Sicsic Pierre Was the franc poincare deliberately undervalued Explorations in Economic History 29 1 1992 69 92 Szramkiewicz Romuald Les Regents et censeurs de la Banque de France nommes sous le Consulat et l Empire Geneve Droz 1974 Yee Robert The Bank of France and the Gold Dependency Observations on the Bank s Weekly Balance Sheets and Reserves 1898 1940 Johns Hopkins University Studies in Applied Economics No 128 5 External links edit in French and English Official site of Bank of France in French Beginnings of Banque de France The directors of Bank of France between 1800 and 1815 48 51 52 N 2 20 21 E 48 864478 N 2 339289 E 48 864478 2 339289 in French Banque de France Minitel Connection Documents and clippings about Bank of France in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bank of France amp oldid 1218653187, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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