Given the ongoing economic crises in various countries around the world, attention at the moment is rightly more focused on interest rate decisions than in normal times.
The process for raising or lowering interest rates varies from country to country. For some, it’s a pretty simple decision made by the Finance Minister, for others, it is a long convoluted process that takes days or even weeks to achieve.
Below we’ll take a look at some of the world’s key economies and how their interest rate decisions are made.
United Kingdom
To begin with we’ll start at home with the UK.
Interest rates are set by the Bank of England which has been fully independent of government control since the late 1990s.
The decision is taken by the Monetary Policy Committee which consists of nine members.
These members include the Governor, his three deputies, the Chief Economist and four external members.
The monetary policy committee meets 8 times a year and its decisions are based on a vote of the members after a set of lengthy formal meetings.
The results of the vote are published in full and those who voted against the majority have to state what rate they would have preferred. If there is a tie, the Governor has the casting vote.

United States
Now turning to the USA, the decision across the Atlantic is taken by the FOMC (the Federal Open Market Committee of the Federal Reserve System)- a long title!
The FOMC meets every 6-8 weeks and is made up of the Board of Governors of the Fed, the President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and four rotating regional president members from across the country.
Other key figures from the Federal Reserve system attend and partake in the discussions but do not vote.
They meet in Washington DC and publish minutes of their discussions three weeks after the event. Like in the UK, how members voted is published.
The Eurozone
The decision making process for interest rates in the eurozone is the responsibility of the European Central Bank’s Governing Council.
This council consists of the ECB’s Executive Board and 15 national central bank governors who take their seats on a rotating process (like in the US).
They meet every 6 weeks to make a decision on the interest rate.
Unlike the UK and the US though, they do not publish the minutes or voting records from their meetings. This is in large part to help the individual governors who could be pressured by their respective countries one way or another and to facilitate a Europe-wide decision making process.


Image Copyright: Max12Max, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
China
The system in China is much more complicated than in the West and is shrouded in much more levels of secrecy and bureaucracy.
The Peoples’s Bank of China is the responsible authority however it is not independent of the government and is instead more of an arm of the government.
The PBoC is known for surprising many with its decisions and often focuses on other monetary policy tools other than interest rate changes when making interventions in the economy.
Japan
Interest rates in Japan are the responsibility of the Bank of Japan, often known as the Nichigin which is based in Tokyo.
The decision is taken by the Policy Board which consists of nine members including the Governor and his two deputies.
The Bank of Japan is independent of the Japanese Government and it is clear and transparent in many of its actions. It publishes detailed information on its decision-making process in both Japanese and English.
