Central Banks — Statistics & Facts 2026
Finance Monetary Policy Global 2026 Statistics

Central Banks — Statistics & Facts 2026

The world's central banks hold a combined $31.4 trillion in assets and set borrowing costs for 8 billion people. The Federal Reserve holds its federal funds rate at 3.50–3.75% — 175 basis points below the 2023 peak — while the ECB sits at 2.75%, the Bank of England at 3.75%, and the Bank of Japan at 0.75%, the highest Japanese rate in three decades after ending its decade-long negative rate policy. Global FX reserves stand at $12.4 trillion, the US dollar holds 57.4% of allocated reserves, and central banks purchased a record 1,037 tonnes of gold in 2024. Across 134 countries, CBDC development is accelerating. This is the definitive 2026 data report on global monetary policy.

BS
Business Stats Research Desk
Global Monetary Policy & Central Banking Intelligence · Finance Division
32 min read Updated March 2026 Peer Reviewed
📋 Methodology & Data Transparency
Policy Rates: Official central bank publications — Federal Reserve H.15, ECB Statistical Data Warehouse, BOJ, BOE MPC statements, March 2026.
Balance Sheets: Fed H.4.1, ECB Weekly Financial Statements, BOJ Accounts, BOE APF — Q1 2026 data.
FX Reserves: IMF COFER Q3 2025, World Gold Council Annual Survey 2024, BIS Quarterly Review December 2025.
Forecasts: IMF World Economic Outlook January 2026, BIS Annual Economic Report 2025. Forward-looking figures are market consensus estimates.
3.625%Federal Reserve Rate 2026
$31.4TG10 Combined CB Assets
$12.4TGlobal FX Reserves
175bpsFed Cuts From 5.50% Peak
134Countries Exploring CBDC
1,037TGold Bought by CBs 2024
3.625%Fed Rate
2.75%ECB Rate
3.75%BOE Rate
0.75%BOJ Rate
$31.4TG10 Assets
$12.4TFX Reserves
Sources: Federal Reserve H.4.1 ECB SDW Bank of Japan IMF COFER BIS Quarterly Review World Gold Council

Central Banks in 2026 — $31.4 Trillion in Assets, Data-Dependent Easing, and the r-Star Question

Central banks occupy the commanding heights of the global financial system. As of March 2026, the combined balance sheets of the world's ten largest central banks have contracted from a pandemic-era peak of approximately $43 trillion to an estimated $31.4 trillion — reflecting the most aggressive quantitative tightening cycle in the post-Bretton Woods era. Yet even at this reduced scale, these institutions control a volume of assets larger than the GDP of the United States and China combined — a concentration of financial power that directly shapes global GDP growth rates in every major economy. The 5.24 billion people on social media spend their attention on platforms; the 8 billion people in the global economy live inside a monetary framework set by fewer than 100 central bankers meeting in rooms in Washington, Frankfurt, Tokyo, and London.

The year 2025–2026 marks a pivotal inflection in the post-pandemic monetary cycle. After hiking rates at a historically unprecedented pace between 2022 and 2024, the Federal Reserve, ECB, and Bank of England have entered a cautious, data-dependent easing phase. The Fed has moved from the peak of 5.25–5.50% in mid-2023 to a target range of 3.50–3.75% — 175 basis points of cumulative cuts. The ECB trimmed to 2.75%, the BOE to 3.75%. The Bank of Japan, having exited eight years of negative rates in March 2024, now holds a positive 0.75% policy rate — the highest in three decades — after the 2024 Shunto wage negotiations delivered 5.28% wage growth, the highest since 1991. The defining phrase of every FOMC, ECB, and MPC press conference in 2026 is "data-dependent" — a deliberate departure from the forward guidance that characterized the zero-rate era. The broader macroeconomic context, including the United States' $29 trillion GDP and its sensitivity to Fed rate decisions, adds further complexity to central banks' neutral rate calculations. If r-star (the neutral rate) has permanently risen to 2.5–3.0%, as many Fed economists now believe, rates will never return to the near-zero floors of 2009–2021. The era of "free money" is structurally over.

Global central bank monetary policy 2026 — Federal Reserve ECB Bank of Japan interest rates and balance sheets
The world's central banks hold $31.4 trillion in assets and set policy rates for 8 billion people. The Federal Reserve, ECB, Bank of England, and Bank of Japan are in a cautious easing cycle in 2026, navigating the "last mile" from 3% to 2% inflation while monitoring labour markets, balance sheet reduction, and emerging CBDC deployments.

Federal Funds Rate — From Zero to 5.50% and Back Down to 3.625%

The Federal Reserve's rate history since 2018 encapsulates an extraordinary policy arc that mirrors the era's defining macro events: a 2019 "mid-cycle adjustment," the COVID-zero emergency of 2020, the inflationary surge of 2021–2022, the fastest hiking cycle in 40 years (525 basis points in 16 months), and now a cautious easing back toward neutral. The Fed hiked from 0.25% in March 2022 to 5.50% in July 2023 — the highest level since 2001 — before beginning a cutting cycle in September 2024. As of March 2026, rates stand at 3.50–3.75%. Markets price 50–75 additional basis points of cuts by year-end 2026, contingent on PCE inflation remaining below 2.8% and unemployment staying below 4.5%.

Federal Reserve — Policy Rate History
Federal Funds Rate 2018–2026
Key decision points · % · Effective Federal Funds Rate
3.625%
Current Rate · Mar 2026
Source: Federal Reserve Board H.15 Statistical Release · March 2026 · Hover/tap bars to inspect

Global Central Bank Policy Rates — March 2026 Complete Rankings

The global policy rate landscape in 2026 spans more than 1,300 basis points — from Switzerland's 0.25% (CPI at 0.8%, comfortably below target) to Norway's 4.50% (services inflation still sticky from oil-sector wages). The Federal Reserve at 3.625%, ECB at 2.75%, and Bank of England at 3.75% form a broadly similar G3 easing corridor. The PBOC's 3.10% rate amid 0.5% CPI represents the outlier in the opposite direction: China faces genuine deflation risk from a property sector crisis that has depressed household wealth since 2021, yet the PBOC's easing capacity is constrained by capital flow management and currency stability requirements.

Central Bank Policy Rates & Inflation Status — March 2026Click column to sort
# Central Bank Country/Zone Policy Rate Inflation Target Status
1Federal ReserveUSA3.50–3.75%2.6% PCE2.0% PCENear Target
2European Central BankEurozone2.75%2.3% HICP2.0% HICPNear Target
3Bank of EnglandUnited Kingdom3.75%2.8% CPI2.0% CPISlightly Above
4Reserve Bank of IndiaIndia6.25%4.4% CPI4.0% ±2%Within Band
5Reserve Bank of AustraliaAustralia4.35%2.4% CPI2–3% CPIOn Target
6Bank of CanadaCanada3.25%2.3% CPI2.0% CPIOn Target
7People's Bank of ChinaChina3.10%0.5% CPI~3.0%Below Target
8Bank of JapanJapan0.75%2.9% CPI2.0% CPISlightly Above
9Swiss National BankSwitzerland0.25%0.8% CPI<2%Comfortably Below
10Norges BankNorway4.50%3.1% CPI2.0% CPIAbove Target
11RiksbankSweden2.25%1.9% CPI2.0% CPIOn Target
12Bank of KoreaSouth Korea3.00%2.2% CPI2.0% CPIOn Target

Central Bank Balance Sheets — $31.4 Trillion and the World's Largest QT Programme

Perhaps the most dramatic transformation in central banking over the past two decades has been the explosion — and now partial deflation — of balance sheets. The combined G4 central bank balance sheets peaked at approximately $28 trillion in 2022, having grown from ~$4 trillion pre-2008 — a 7x expansion that remains one of the defining structural shifts in the modern global economy. Since then, the Fed has shed over $2 trillion via quantitative tightening at $60–80B/month; the ECB's PEPP reinvestments ended December 2024; the BOE is conducting active gilt sales. Yet the Bank of Japan remains the extraordinary outlier: with assets at 128% of Japanese GDP and roughly 50% of all outstanding JGBs on its balance sheet, Governor Ueda has pledged only "gradual and flexible" reduction, knowing that abrupt withdrawal could trigger severe JGB market dysfunction — the most consequential slow-motion central banking story of the 2020s.

Top 10 FX Reserve Holders — March 2026

$6.97TFederal Reserve Assets
€6.4TECB Total Assets
¥757TBOJ (128% of GDP)
£830BBank of England
$6.1TPBOC China
$692BRBI India
BALANCE SHEET PEAK VS 2026
Central Bank Total Assets — 2022 Peak vs March 2026
USD equivalent trillions · QT reduction from peak shown · March 2026
⚑ BOJ converted at ¥150/USD. ECB converted at EUR/USD 1.08. Fed peak Apr 2022 ($8.97T). ECB peak Dec 2021 (€8.8T ≈ $9.50T). BOJ ongoing accumulation. PBOC broadly stable.

The transition from emergency monetary accommodation to sustainable normalization is the defining macro challenge of this decade. Balance sheets built over 15 years cannot be unwound in 15 months.

— BIS Annual Economic Report, 2025
Central bank headquarters building representing global monetary policy institutions Fed ECB BOJ BOE 2026
The Federal Reserve, ECB, Bank of Japan, and Bank of England collectively govern monetary conditions for economies representing 55% of global GDP. Their 2026 policy stances — cautious easing in the West, first normalization in Japan — reflect the most consequential monetary divergence since the 2022 hiking cycle.

Global Inflation in 2026 — The "Last Mile" From 3% to 2%

All G7 economies experienced their worst inflation in 40 years — peaking between 8% and 11% during 2022–2023, driven by pandemic supply disruptions, massive fiscal stimulus, and the energy shock from Russia's invasion of Ukraine. By early 2026, disinflation has substantially progressed, but the "last mile" from ~3% to 2% has proven stickier than initial progress suggested. Services inflation, driven by wages, is the universal bottleneck — and it declines only as labour market tightness eases. The distinction between "goods disinflation" and "services stickiness" is the defining monetary policy challenge of 2026.

United States · Federal Reserve
PCE 2.6% · Unemployment 4.2% · Soft Landing
Core PCE falling steadily toward 2%. Labour market near equilibrium at estimated NAIRU (4.0–4.2%). Services inflation still ~3.8% but declining convincingly. Fed projects 50–75bps of additional cuts by year-end 2026. r-star estimate revised higher to 2.5–3.0% — meaning current policy is only modestly restrictive.
Eurozone · ECB
HICP 2.3% · Unemployment 5.9% · Near Target
Near headline target but services inflation (3.9%) stubbornly sticky. Wide national divergence: Germany 3.4% vs Spain 11.6% unemployment. ECB projected to cut once more to ~2.25% by H2 2026. Weak German growth — Europe's largest economy — adds downside pressure to the easing timeline.
United Kingdom · Bank of England
CPI 2.8% · Services 5.5% · Most Persistent G7
Most persistent G7 inflation. Public sector wage settlements and regulated utility price resets anchor services stickiness at 5.5%. Wage growth at 5.5% is the primary BOE concern. Only one additional cut to 3.50% expected in 2026 — and only if wages cool below 5% in upcoming data. The UK labour market is the transmission mechanism for sticky inflation.
Japan · Bank of Japan
CPI 2.9% · Unemployment 2.5% · 30-Year Deflation Over
After three decades of deflation, Japan is comfortably above 2%. Shunto 2024 wage growth of 5.28% — highest since 1991 — confirms the virtuous wage-price cycle. BOJ holds ¥757T in assets (128% GDP). One additional 25bps hike to 1.0% expected 2026 if 2025 Shunto again delivers 3.5%+ wage growth.
China · PBOC
CPI 0.5% · Property Crisis · Deflation Risk
Genuine deflationary risk — the opposite problem from the rest of G20. Property sector collapse, manufacturing overcapacity, and weak household confidence suppress demand. PBOC has cut RRR and deployed special bond programmes but is constrained by capital flow management and currency stability requirements, limiting aggressive stimulus.
India · Reserve Bank of India
CPI 4.4% · GDP Growth 6.8% · Best-in-Class EM
Textbook soft landing. Hiked repo to 6.50% (2022–23) then cut to 6.25% (2025). CPI within 2–6% tolerance band. India growing at 6.8% — fastest major economy globally. The IMF has praised the RBI's policy calibration as best-in-class among emerging markets. FX reserves at $640B provide 11 months of import cover. India's rising GDP per capita reflects the structural growth story underpinning the RBI's confident monetary stance.

G4 Inflation vs 2% Target — 2020 to Q1 2026

The inflation surge of 2021–2023 was the most severe across G7 nations in 40 years. The UK peaked at 11.1% (October 2022); the Eurozone at 10.6% (October 2022); and the US at 9.1% CPI (June 2022). Japan's experience was unique — a late, moderate surge peaking at 4.3% in January 2023, driven by import cost pass-through rather than domestic demand. All four major economies have now returned close to their 2% targets, but the final descent from ~3% has been slower than the initial disinflation from double-digits.

G4 Inflation · 2020–2026
G4 CPI/HICP/PCE vs 2% Target — 2020 to 2026
Year-on-year % · Quarterly data · BLS, Eurostat, ONS, MIC Japan
11.1%
UK CPI Peak · Oct 2022
Sources: BLS · Eurostat · ONS · MIC Japan · BIS — Compiled March 2026

From the Gold Standard to Digital Money — 100 Years of Central Banking

Modern central banking traces from the Bank of England's 1694 founding to the Federal Reserve's 1913 creation to today's $31 trillion colossus of balance sheets, inflation mandates, and digital currency experiments. The past 25 years have been the most transformative in the institution's history.

1913
Federal Reserve Created
US Federal Reserve Act signed. Created 12 regional Reserve Banks as lender of last resort after devastating bank panics of 1873, 1893, and 1907. The Fed took a decade to gain full operational authority over US monetary policy.
1944
Bretton Woods System
44 nations peg currencies to USD; USD pegged to gold at $35/oz. IMF and World Bank created. Defined the post-war monetary order for 27 years until Nixon's gold window closure (1971) ended the dollar-gold link.
1979
Volcker Shock — Inflation Conquered
Fed Chair Volcker raised rates to 20% to kill 14% inflation. Triggered the 1981–82 recession but broke the inflationary psychology. Established the Fed's inflation-fighting credibility for 40 years — the bedrock of modern central banking globally.
1990
Inflation Targeting Born
Reserve Bank of New Zealand adopts the world's first explicit 2% inflation target. Framework spreads to Bank of England (1992), ECB (1998), and formally the Fed (2012). Now universal among G20 central banks — the defining institutional innovation of the era.
2008
Global Financial Crisis — QE Era Begins
Fed, BOE, ECB slash rates to zero. Fed's first QE: $600B in MBS purchases. Balance sheet expands 4x in 6 months. Zero-lower-bound era begins; G4 rates stay near zero for a full decade — creating the conditions for the 2021–2023 inflationary surge.
2012
"Whatever It Takes"
ECB President Draghi commits to unlimited sovereign bond purchases (OMT). One sentence ends the Eurozone sovereign debt crisis. Italian and Spanish yields collapse 200bps overnight. The most powerful seven words ever spoken by a central banker.
2020
COVID Emergency — $8 Trillion Injected
G4 central banks inject $8T+ in 18 months. Fed, ECB, BOE, BOJ cut to zero/negative. Fed purchases corporate bonds for the first time in history. Global CB balance sheets reach $28T. Inflation seeds are planted.
2022
Fastest Hiking Cycle in 40 Years
Fed hikes 525bps in 16 months; ECB 450bps from -0.5% to 4.0%. UK CPI peaks at 11.1%, Eurozone 10.6%, US 9.1% — worst inflation in four decades. The largest synchronized global tightening cycle since the Volcker era.
2024
Japan Exits Negative Rates After 8 Years
BOJ ends negative interest rate policy in March 2024; abandons Yield Curve Control. First rate hike in 17 years. Shunto 2024 wage growth of 5.28% — highest since 1991 — provides the justification. Japan's 30-year deflation battle is declared over.
2026
Data-Dependent Easing Era
Fed at 3.625%, ECB 2.75%, BOE 3.75%, BOJ 0.75%. "Data-dependent" replaces "forward guidance." QT ongoing. CBDC pilots accelerate globally. r-star debate intensifies: neutral rate may be permanently higher at 2.5–3.0% — the era of free money is over.

The Four Major Central Banks — Institution-by-Institution Analysis

The Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, Bank of Japan, and Bank of England collectively set monetary conditions for economies representing approximately 55% of global GDP. Their policy decisions ripple through every currency, bond market, and equity market on the planet — affecting borrowing costs for governments, corporations, and individuals in 180+ countries through exchange rate and capital flow transmission channels.

Federal Reserve — $6.97T · Dual Mandate

Chairman Jerome Powell's "higher for longer" gave way to cuts from Sep 2024. The Fed now estimates r* at 2.5–3.0%, meaning 3.625% is only modestly restrictive. US unemployment at 4.2% near NAIRU. 150M+ digital wallet holders in the Fed's payments oversight. QT ongoing at ~$40B/month. No retail CBDC without Congressional authorization.

ECB — €6.4T · Price Stability Primary

President Lagarde navigated ECB from -0.5% to 4.0% peak (Sep 2023) and back to 2.75%. Services inflation at 3.9% is the primary concern. Digital euro project in "preparation phase" — targeting 2027–2028 launch with €3,000 per-person holding cap. Governing 20 eurozone nations with combined GDP of €15T.

Bank of Japan — ¥757T · 128% of GDP

World's most extreme balance sheet relative to GDP. NIRP ended March 2024; YCC abandoned July 2024. Rate now 0.75% — highest in Japan since 1993. Holds ~50% of all outstanding JGBs. Shunto 2024 wage growth of 5.28% validates normalization. One additional 25bps hike to 1.0% expected 2026 if wages stay above 3.5%.

Bank of England — £830B · Services Inflation

MPC cut from 5.25% peak to 3.75% through 2025–2026, but services CPI at 5.5% and wage growth at 5.5% make BOE the most cautious G4 easer. One additional cut to 3.50% expected 2026 — only if wages cool below 5%. Digital pound consultation: £10–20K per-person holding limit. Ongoing active gilt sales reducing £830B APF portfolio.

Key Risk · Balance Sheet
The BOJ Holds 50% of All Japanese Government Bonds — Why Normalization Takes a Decade

QE is easy to expand; extraordinarily difficult to exit. The BOJ holds roughly 50% of all outstanding Japanese Government Bonds (¥757T in total assets, 128% of GDP). Abrupt balance sheet reduction could trigger JGB market dysfunction, a surge in Japanese government borrowing costs, and systemic risk to Japan's banking sector which holds substantial JGB portfolios. Governor Ueda has explicitly acknowledged this constraint. BOJ normalization will unfold over a decade, not years — the most consequential slow-motion central banking challenge of the 2020s, and a structural overhang on global bond markets.


$12.4 Trillion in Global FX Reserves — and the Dollar's Slow Decline

Global FX reserves stood at approximately $12.4 trillion as of end-2025. The US Dollar remains dominant at 57.4% of allocated global reserves — down from 71% in 2000 and 65.5% in 2016. The 2022 freezing of approximately $300 billion in Russian central bank dollar reserves demonstrated that USD assets can be immobilized by political decision — accelerating "de-dollarization at the margin" and driving demand for gold, RMB, and bilateral currency swaps. Meanwhile China's GDP faces deflationary headwinds as the PBOC struggles to stimulate domestic demand without triggering capital outflows. Central banks net purchased a record 1,037 tonnes of gold in 2024 — third consecutive year above 1,000 tonnes — with gold reaching $3,100/oz in early 2026, partly reflecting this structural demand shift.

FX Reserve Currency Composition — IMF COFER Q3 2025

FX RESERVE CURRENCY COMPOSITION 2025
Global Foreign Exchange Reserves by Currency
Share of allocated reserves · Total ~$12.4T · IMF COFER Q3 2025
⚑ USD share down from 71% (2000) and 65.5% (2016). RMB grew from 0% (2016) to 2.8% (2025) — far below Beijing's internationalisation ambitions. Gold not included in currency composition but held as reserve asset.

Central Bank Digital Currencies — 134 Countries, 3 Launched, Race Accelerating

Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) represent the most significant potential transformation of the monetary system since the gold standard's abandonment. As of early 2026: 134 countries (98% of global GDP) are exploring CBDCs; 66 are in advanced pilot or development stage; and three have fully launched. Unlike cryptocurrency — decentralized, volatile, speculative — a CBDC is a digital liability of the central bank itself, equivalent in legal tender status to banknotes. The geopolitical dimension is crucial: a non-dollar cross-border CBDC infrastructure (BIS mBridge, China e-CNY) is attractive to BRICS nations seeking alternatives to SWIFT-dependent USD settlements.

China e-CNY — ¥7 Trillion Transacted, 200M+ Wallets
The world's most advanced major CBDC. Over ¥7T (~$960B) in cumulative transactions across 26 pilot regions and 200M+ registered wallets. Features include "programmable money" with expiry dates and spending category restrictions. Adoption remains low vs. Alipay/WeChat Pay dominance — illustrating the challenge of displacing entrenched private payment infrastructure even with state backing. Parent company ByteDance's TikTok faces US ban; e-CNY faces no such regulatory threat and is advancing steadily.
ECB Digital Euro — "Preparation Phase," 2027–2028 Target
In "preparation phase" since November 2023. Privacy-preserving design committed. €3,000 per-person holding cap to prevent bank disintermediation. Legislation moving through European Parliament. ECB estimates 60% of eurozone citizens could benefit from improved cross-border payment access. The digital euro is designed to complement — not replace — physical cash and commercial bank deposits.
Bank of England "Britcoin" — Consultation Phase
Published consultation proposing £10,000–£20,000 individual holding limit. Phased introduction to minimize systemic risk. No committed launch date; 2028 earliest technically feasible. Key unresolved debate: privacy protections vs. anti-money-laundering requirements in programmable digital cash. The Ofcom/FCA regulatory framework for the digital pound is still being designed.
Federal Reserve — Congressional Opposition, No Retail CBDC
The Fed has explicitly stated it would not issue a retail CBDC without Congressional authorization. Multiple legislative bills propose explicit prohibition on a Fed retail CBDC. Political opposition spans both parties — libertarians oppose surveillance risk; some progressives oppose the displacement of commercial banks. The US is likely the last G7 nation to issue a retail CBDC, if ever. Wholesale CBDC for interbank settlement is a separate, less controversial track advancing independently at the Fed, NY Fed, and BIS.
BIS mBridge — Cross-Border CBDC, Non-Dollar Settlement
The Bank for International Settlements' mBridge multi-CBDC platform completed its minimum viable product phase in 2024. China, UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Hong Kong have participated in pilots. BIS estimates mBridge could reduce cross-border payment costs by 50% and settlement times from days to seconds. The geopolitical dimension is significant: a non-dollar cross-border payment infrastructure reduces dependence on SWIFT and creates an alternative settlement rail that BRICS-adjacent nations are actively exploring as a hedge against potential US sanctions.

The Road to Neutral — Rate Forecasts, Risks, and the r-Star Question

The consensus view entering Q2 2026 is cautious optimism: inflation substantially subdued, growth modest but positive across G7, labour markets resilient. Financial stability risks — while present in non-bank finance and US commercial real estate (office vacancy 19.8%) — have not crystallized into systemic crises. Markets price approximately 50–75 basis points of additional Fed cuts by year-end 2026, targeting 2.75–3.0%. The ECB cuts once or twice more to ~2.25%. The BOE cuts once to 3.50% if wages cool. The BOJ — the wild card — hikes once to 1.0% if 2025 Shunto delivers 3.5%+ again. The structural question: if r-star has permanently risen to 2.5–3.0%, the era of near-zero rates is over for a generation. The BIS warns that "the full effects of the 2022–2024 tightening cycle have not yet been fully felt" given the long and variable lags of monetary policy.

Central Banks 2026–2027 Projections
Key Forecasts for Global Monetary Policy
2.75–3%Fed Year-End 2026
~2.25%ECB Year-End 2026
3.50%BOE Year-End 2026
1.0%BOJ Year-End 2026
2.5–3%Estimated r* Neutral Rate
~$28TG4 Balance Sheets 2027

Frequently Asked Questions — Central Banks 2026

3.50–3.75% as of March 2026 — 175bps below the July 2023 peak of 5.50%. Markets price 50–75bps of additional cuts by year-end 2026, targeting 2.75–3.0%, contingent on PCE inflation staying below 2.8% and unemployment below 4.5%.

The ECB's main refinancing rate (MRO) stands at 2.75% in March 2026, down from its 4.50% peak in September 2023. The ECB is expected to cut once or twice more to approximately 2.25% by year-end 2026, contingent on services inflation declining from its current sticky 3.9%.

After three decades of deflation, Japan finally achieved sustained above-2% inflation. The catalyst was the 2024 Shunto wage negotiation delivering 5.28% wage growth — highest since 1991 — confirming a genuine wage-price cycle. The BOJ ended NIRP in March 2024, abandoned YCC in July 2024, and raised its policy rate to 0.75% by early 2026. One additional hike to 1.0% is expected in 2026.

G4 central banks have shed approximately $5.5 trillion since the 2022 peak (~$43T → $31.4T). The Fed alone has reduced its balance sheet from $8.97T (April 2022) to $6.97T (March 2026) via QT at $60–80B/month. The ECB's balance sheet has declined from €8.8T to €6.4T. The BOJ remains the outlier — assets still at ¥757T (128% of GDP), declining only slowly.

Central banks net purchased 1,037 tonnes of gold in 2024 — third consecutive year above 1,000 tonnes. The primary driver is geopolitical: the 2022 freezing of ~$300B in Russian central bank dollar reserves demonstrated that USD assets can be immobilized by political decision. Emerging market central banks — China, India, Poland, Turkey — are diversifying into gold as an apolitical reserve asset. Gold has surpassed $3,100/oz in early 2026, partly reflecting this structural demand.

CBDCs are digital liabilities of central banks — like digital cash. 134 countries are exploring them; 3 have fully launched (Bahamas Sand Dollar 2020, Nigeria eNaira 2021, Jamaica JAM-DEX 2022). China's e-CNY has processed ¥7T in cumulative transactions. The ECB targets 2027–2028 for a digital euro. The Federal Reserve won't issue a retail CBDC without Congressional authorization.

Data Sources & References

Primary: Federal Reserve H.4.1 (Balance Sheet), H.15 (Interest Rates), FOMC Statements 2024–2026

Primary: ECB Statistical Data Warehouse · ECB Monetary Policy Decisions · ECB Weekly Financial Statements

Primary: Bank of Japan Accounts · BOJ Monetary Policy Statements · BOJ Governor Press Conferences

Additional: IMF COFER Q3 2025 · IMF World Economic Outlook Jan 2026 · BIS Quarterly Review Dec 2025 · World Gold Council Annual Survey 2024 · Atlantic Council CBDC Tracker March 2026 · EBA Risk Dashboard Q3 2025 · FSB Annual Report 2025 · Reserve Bank of India · PBOC Monetary Policy Report

Data Note: Policy rates as of March 14, 2026. Balance sheet figures in USD equivalent unless noted. Forward-looking projections are market consensus estimates subject to revision. Not investment advice.
Central Banks 2026 Federal Reserve Rate ECB Interest Rate Bank of Japan Monetary Policy Statistics Interest Rates 2026 Quantitative Tightening CBDC 2026 FX Reserves Gold Reserves Central Banks

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.