Bank of
England
Central bank of United Kingdom
Written and fact-checked by
The Editors of Encyclopaedia
Britannica
Last Updated: Mar 24,
2023 • Article History
Bank of England, the Central bank of the United
Kingdom. Its headquarters are in the central financial district of
the City of London.
The Bank of England was incorporated
by act of Parliament in 1694 with the immediate purpose of raising funds to
allow the English government to wage war
against France in the Low
Countries (see Grand Alliance, War of the). A royal charter allowed the bank to
operate as a joint-stock bank with limited liability. No other joint-stock banks
were permitted in England and Wales until
1826. This special status and its position as the government’s banker gave the
bank considerable competitive advantages.
The bank was located first in
Mercers’ Hall and then in Grocers’ Hall, but it was moved to its permanent
location on Threadneedle Street in the 1730s. By that time it had become the
largest and most prestigious financial institution in England, and its banknotes
were widely circulated. As a result, it became banker to other banks, which, by
maintaining balances with the Bank of England, could settle debts among
themselves. The bank was threatened by the economic instability that
accompanied the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars, but its standing was also
considerably enhanced by its actions in raising funds
for Britain’s involvement in those conflicts.
What is inflation?
During the 19th century the bank
gradually assumed the responsibilities of a central bank. In 1833 it began to
print legal tender, and it undertook the roles of lender of last resort and
guardian of the nation’s gold reserves in the following few decades.
The bank was privately owned until
1946, when it was nationalized. It funds public borrowing, issues bank notes,
and manages the country’s gold and foreign-exchange reserves. It is an
important adviser to the government on monetary policy and is largely responsible for implementing the chosen policy by its
dealings in the money, bond, and foreign-exchange markets. The bank’s freedom
of action in this regard was considerably enhanced when it was given the power
to determine short-term interest rates in 1997. The Bank of England is a member
of the European Central Bank and part of its
General Council.