Central Bank of Egypt
Headquarters | Cairo |
---|---|
Coordinates | 30°03′16.9″N 31°14′48.0″E / 30.054694°N 31.246667°E 30°03′29″N 31°14′03″E / 30.0581°N 31.2343°E |
Established | 25 June 1898[1] |
Ownership | 100% state ownership[2] |
Governor | Hassan Abdullah |
Central bank of | Egypt |
Currency | Egyptian pound EGP (ISO 4217) |
Reserves | US$40.361 billion[2] |
Bank rate | 12.25[3] |
Interest on reserves | 11.25%[3] |
Preceded by | National Bank of Egypt (until 1960) |
Website | www.cbe.org.eg |
The Central Bank of Egypt (CBE; Arabic: البنك المركزي المصري) is the central bank and monetary authority of the Arab Republic of Egypt.
Currency
[edit]Since the trading of gold and silver coins in Egypt and until 1834, there was no one unit of currency to unify the country. In 1834, a decree was realised stating the forging of an Egyptian currency based on the two metals (gold and silver). In accordance with said decree, the minting of a currency in the shape of gold and silver Riyals began. In 1836, the Egyptian pound was first introduced and it became open for public use.[4]
The bank floated the Egyptian pound during the morning of the 13th of November 2016.[5] [6]
Functions
[edit]Its functions include[citation needed]
- Regulates banks and the banking system of Egypt;
- Formulates and implements Egypt's banking policy, monetary policy and credit policy;
- Issues banknotes;
- Manages gold and the foreign exchange reserves of the Arab Republic of Egypt
- Regulates and manages Egypt's presence in the foreign exchange market;
- Supervises the national payments system;
- Manages Egypt's public and private external debt.
List of governors
[edit]Following is a list of the Governors of the Central Bank of Egypt:[7]
Name | Took office | Left office |
---|---|---|
Sir Elwin Palmer | August 1898 | January 1906 |
Sir Frederick Rowlatt | June 1906 | February 1921 |
Sir Bertram Hornsby | March 1921 | February 1931 |
Sir Edward Cook | March 1931 | October 1940 |
Sir Norman Nixon | October 1940 | April 1946 |
Sir Frederick Leith-Ross | May 1946 | April 1951 |
Ahmed Zaki Saad | May 1951 | April 1952 |
Mohamed Fekry | May 1952 | March 1955 |
Ahmed Zaki Saad | March 1956 | July 1957 |
Abd El-Gelil El Emary | November 1957 | March 1960 |
Abd El-Hakim El Refaie | March 1960 | March 1964 |
Ahmed Zendo | March 1964 | February 1967 |
Ahmed Nazmy | February 1967 | January 1971 |
Ahmed Zendo | February 1971 | March 1976 |
Mohamed Abd El Fatah Ibrahim | March 1976 | January 1982 |
Mohamed Shalaby | February 1982 | March 1985 |
Ali Negm | March 1985 | November 1986 |
Mahmoud Hamed | November 1986 | October 1993 |
Ismail Hassan Mohamed | October 1993 | October 2001 |
Mohamed Abul Eyoun | October 2001 | November 2003 |
Farouk El-Okdah | December 2003 | February 2013 |
Hisham Ramez | February 2013 | November 2015 |
Tarek Hassan Amer | November 2015 | August 2022 |
Hassan Abdalla | August 2022 | Present |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Émergence d'une banque centrale" (PDF). bcl.lu (in French). Retrieved 11 April 2024.
- ^ a b Weidner, Jan (2017). "The Organisation and Structure of Central Banks" (PDF). Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek.
- ^ a b "Press Release". Central Bank of Egypt. 28 March 2019. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
- ^ "نبذة تاريخية" (in Arabic). Central Bank of Egypt. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
- ^ Hossam Mounir (2 November 2017) — Flotation was boldest decision in history of Egyptian economic, banking sectors, published by Daily News Egypt Retrieved 14 February 2020
- ^ The EGP Devaluation: A new beginning, published by PwC - Retrieved 14 February 2020
- ^ "CBE Governors". www.cbe.org.eg. Archived from the original on 30 December 2018. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
External links
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