Austrian National Bank


The is the National [central bank |national central bank] for Austria within the Eurosystem.
Neither the bank itself nor the European Central Bank use the name Austrian National Bank, but use the name Oesterreichische Nationalbank in their English communications. The Austrian National Bank started operations on as central bank of the newly formed First Austrian Republic, under the economic assistance provided to Austria by the Economic and Financial Organization of the League of Nations. It thus succeeded the Austro-Hungarian Bank on Austrian territory, with its name recalling that of the Austro-Hungarian Bank's predecessor entity founded in 1816. It was liquidated following the Anschluss in March 1938, and re-established in July 1945. From 1923 to 1938 and again from 1945 to 1998, it issued the Austrian schilling.
It is an Aktiengesellschaft governed by special legislative provision, fully owned by the Austrian federal government since May 2010 with shareholder rights exercised by the Minister of Finance. Before 2010, half of the capital was in the hands of employer and employee organizations as well as banks and insurance corporations.
The Austrian National Bank is not itself a financial supervisory authority but participates in European banking supervision as a member of the Supervisory Board of the European Central Bank, alongside the Financial Market Authority. It is also a member of the European Systemic Risk Board.

History

The Oesterreichische Nationalbank was established under the conditions of the stabilization loan coordinated by the Economic and Financial Organization of the League of Nations in 1922–23. The bank's statutes were drafted by the League's Financial Committee and enacted in Austrian legislation on. The new institution started operations on. It took over the former Austrian-territory branches and operations of the Austro-Hungarian Bank, whose liquidation had been implemented in accordance with the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye signed on, and whose Governing Council last met on.
Following the banking crisis of 1931, Austrian National Bank President Viktor Kienböck oversaw an orthodox economic policy paradigm in which he rigorously defended the currency in the face of growing overvaluation. This contributed to a substantial contraction in Austrian GDP.
Following the Anschluss in 1938, the Austrian National Bank's was liquidated, and its shareholders were forced to accept German government bonds in exchange for their shares. Most of its assets and liabilities, including gold reserves, were taken over by the Reichsbank; Karl Blessing, by then a junior Reichsbank official and future President of the Deutsche Bundesbank, directed the restructuring. The former Austrian National Bank became the Reichsbank's Vienna branch, and the Reichsmark became Austria's currency by German decree of. The former National Bank's gold holdings and foreign currency reserves were moved to Berlin.
The Oesterreichische Nationalbank was re-established by the Central Bank Transition Act of of the Second Austrian Republic. The Austrian schilling came back to replace the Reichsmark on. Much of the head office building served as headquarters of the American occupation forces in Austria from 1945 to 1951.

Tasks and composition

The main tasks of the OeNB center on contributing to a stability-oriented monetary policy within the Eurozone, safeguarding financial stability in Austria and supplying the general public and the business community in Austria with high-quality, i.e. counterfeit-proof, cash. In addition, the OeNB manages reserve assets, i.e. gold and foreign exchange holdings, with a view to backing the euro in times of crisis, draws up economic analyses, compiles statistical data, is active in international organizations and is responsible for payment systems oversight. Furthermore, the OeNB operates a payment system for the euro, promotes knowledge and understanding among the general public and decision makers owing to its comprehensive communication policy, and supports research in Austria.
NameFunction
Martin KocherGovernor
Gottfried HaberVice Governor
Eduard SchockExecutive Director
Thomas SteinerExecutive Director

Presidents/Governors