Bank of Jamaica
Central bank and monetary authority
of 100 · improving trend · Strong moral/spiritual alignment
Standing
73/100
Raw Score
62/85
Confidence
86%
Evidence
Broad
About
Jamaica central bank shows a strong observable public-service mandate across price stability, financial-system stability, currency, payments, inclusion and public economic data.
Above-neutral institutional alignment with a public-good mandate and improving macro-financial performance, tempered by consumer-protection and oversight challenges.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Strong public mandate, statutory purpose, reporting habits and credible macro-stability delivery; moderated by consumer-protection, cyber/fraud and expanded-regulation pressure points.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Statutory objectives center price stability and financial-system stability with a public economic mandate.
Core functions, publications and public policy structure align with central-bank mission.
BOJ describes statutory accountability, board structures, committees, audit, risk and reporting functions.
Contribution to Others
Price stability, payment-system oversight and reserves management directly affect national welfare.
BOJ drives National Financial Inclusion Strategy and public literacy/access work.
Consumer complaints channels exist, but fraud and market-conduct gaps remain visible.
Inclusion agenda is positive, but outcome evidence for vulnerable groups is partial.
Personal Discipline
Inflation targeting and policy-rate discipline show restraint, with real public tradeoffs.
Wholly public ownership and statutory service responsibilities provide a visible duty framework.
AML/CFT, audit and risk-management structures are visible, with enforcement follow-through needing ongoing evidence.
Reliability
Annual reports, financial stability reports, statistics, policy decisions and IMF engagement create a broad disclosure record.
Board, statutory committees, audit and risk-management structures are publicly described.
Supervision and cyber-risk work support follow-through, though non-bank oversight is evolving.
Inflation convergence supports credibility; CBDC adoption and consumer protection need longer-term proof.
Stability Under Pressure
IMF credits Jamaica institutional stability and resilience through shocks, with BOJ central to the macro framework.
1985 reform, 2020 mandate reform, CBDC legalization and cyber consultation show adaptation capacity.
Fraud and non-bank oversight pressure prompted reform direction, but results remain under observation.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Bank of Jamaica established by law
Bank of Jamaica was established by law and opened in May 1961, replacing the Currency Board system.
→ Created national monetary authority.
highMandate revised for price and financial-system stability
The 2020 amendment clarified price stability as the primary objective and established full-fledged inflation targeting.
→ Clarified statutory objectives and policy accountability.
highSSL fraud scandal prompted broader regulatory scrutiny
The SSL fraud scandal exposed wider regulatory architecture pressure and led to proposals for BOJ to regulate non-bank financial institutions.
→ Highlighted need for stronger supervisory coordination and consumer protection.
highIMF noted strengthened macro stability and inflation convergence
IMF 2025 Article IV materials cited Jamaica macro-stability track record and inflation convergence to BOJ target band.
→ Independent evidence supports recent price-stability discipline and resilience.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Transition from currency board to central bank
1961BOJ replaced the Currency Board system before independence.
Response: Assumed monetary authority functions.
positive institutional formationSSL fraud and wider oversight scrutiny
2023A major non-bank securities fraud scandal exposed market-regulation and consumer-confidence weaknesses.
Response: Policy direction shifted toward broader BOJ regulatory responsibility.
mixed: reform response after broader-system failureHurricane and external shock context
2025Jamaica faced weather and external shocks while maintaining macro-stability indicators.
Response: IMF reported inflation convergence and institutional resilience.
resilient macro-governanceProgression
current stage
JAM-DEX, cyber-risk consultation, financial inclusion and post-SSL regulatory pressure expanded public-facing tests.
mixed but improvingearly years
1960-1961 creation to replace the Currency Board and prepare for independence-era monetary governance.
buildinggrowth years
2020 amendment clarified price-stability primacy and explicit inflation target framework.
improvingBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Statutory public-good mandate
- • Regular annual and financial-stability reporting
- • Clear inflation-targeting framework
- • Financial inclusion coordination
Concerns
- • Consumer harm from fraud and digital banking risks
- • Expanded regulatory expectations after non-bank failures
- • CBDC adoption and access uncertainty
Evidence Quality
8
Strong
3
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: broad
Draft institutional profile based on public evidence; evaluates observable institutional behavior, not hidden intent.