Help and FAQs

Frequently asked questions and help

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  1. The Banque de France ensures that issuers of commercial paper and medium-term notes (NEU CP and NEU MTN) comply with the formal conditions of issuance laid down by law.
  2. It also ensures transparency in the NEU CP-NEU MTN market by publishing issuers’ IMs on its website along with statistics relating to the issued securities (notably daily, weekly and monthly publications) to provide an overview of the market.

According to Article L. 141-8 of the French Monetary and Financial Code, in France this comprises the Treasury, the Institut d'émission des départements d'outre-mer (IEDOM – Delegated Central Bank for the French Overseas Departments and Territories), the Institut d'émission d'outre-mer (IEOM – the Central Bank for the French Overseas Territories in the Pacific Region), the Caisse des dépôts et consignations, and bodies expressly authorised by decisions of the Banque de France’s General Council. For foreign or international entities, see page on the Banque de France's international investment offer.

You are a public institution and wish to open an account with the Banque de France: contact the Banque de France on 34 14 for further information. 

You are already a Banque de France client and wish to obtain information about the cash services provided by the Banque de France: contact your usual account manager.
 

Stable prices allow consumers to plan their purchases and encourage businesses to invest. They also help to maintain confidence in the euro by stabilising the quantity of goods and services that can be bought with a given amount of money.

The goods included in consumer price indexes (CPIs) and methods used to calculate them can vary significantly from one country to another, making them difficult to compare. As a result, the Member States of the European Union created a Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices or HICP: this price index is “harmonised” in that all EU Member States use the same methodology, so data can be compared across countries.

The HICP is calculated by Eurostat and each country’s national statistics bureau, using standardised statistical methods. It takes into account expenditure by households, regardless of their nationality and residential status in the reporting country, on goods and services that directly satisfy a need.

The central bank purchases assets such as government or corporate bonds when there is a risk that inflation will remain too low. In doing so, it supports the economy by encouraging consumption and investment, which in turn puts upward pressure on prices and helps push inflation up towards the 2% target.

Climate disruption has adverse consequences for economic growth, inflation and the transmission of monetary policy to households and businesses. This undermines price stability, which is the ECB’s principal objective. This is why the ECB has included climate considerations in its monetary policy framework.

M3 includes cash (banknotes and coins in circulation) and cashless money (money stored in the form of digits in overnight deposits) that can be used immediately by means of payment instruments, remunerated deposits – which are considered to be liquid – and financial instruments with a maturity of up to two years issued by financial institutions and subscribed by savers and investors.