The Reserve Bank halted its briefings for media and analysts after a breach of the embargo by a MediaWorks reporter. Photo / Mark Mitchell
The Reserve Bank halted its briefings for media and analysts after a breach of the embargo by a MediaWorks reporter. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Reserve Bank Governor Graeme Wheeler says the Bank is investigating the possibility of continuing with media lock-ups in advance of monetary policy announcements.
The Bank had employed tech consultants to look at logistics of securing lock-ups against leaks on digital devices, Wheeler said.
The Reserve Bank halted its pre-monetary policystatement briefings for media and analysts after a breach of the embargo by a MediaWorks reporter.
The reporter emailed an embargoed story, on the change to the official cash rate in March, through to their main newsroom an hour before the lock-up ended and somehow the information ended up with an independent financial blogger.
MediaWorks has also been banned from Reserve Bank press conferences.
It was clear that the lock-up system couldn't continue on trust alone, Wheeler said.
Lock-ups were not common place for central banks around the world, he said.
There were three central banks that did have them for media - the US Federal Reserve, Bank of England and Bank of Chile. In all those cases the digital environment was completely controlled by the bank.