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Multiple search words are automatically linked with "AND". Text enclosed in quotation marks (") returns only the pages in which this text occurs exactly. With the search filters next to the results you have the possibility to further limit your search.
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Prof Helmut Schlesinger
President of the Deutsche Bundesbank 1 Aug 1991 – 31 Sep 1993
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MFI interest rate statistics
27.11.2024 DE
The focus of interest rate statistics is the interest rates applied by domestic banks (MFIs) in Germany and the related volumes of euro-denominated deposits and loans vis-à-vis households and non-financial corporations domiciled in euro-area countries.
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Tiere und Geld Familien- und Kinderführung
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Central banks of the European System (ESCB)
Links to the websites of the ESCB's central banks.
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Data collection on housing loans
This section contains information and material on statistics for analysing risks from financing of residential real estate. The reported data contains information on financing conditions of mortgages of private households.
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The Bundesbank mourns the passing of former President Helmut Schlesinger
27.12.2024 DE
The Deutsche Bundesbank mourns the passing of its former president, Helmut Schlesinger. He was Vice-President of Germany’s central bank from January 1980 to the end of July 1991 and then President until the end of September 1993. Mr Schlesinger passed away on 23 December 2024 at the age of 100.
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Tägliche Rendite der börsennotierten Bundeswertpapiere
102 KB, PDF
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Forecast for Germany: significantly gloomier growth outlook
13.12.2024 DE
The German economy is not only struggling with persistent economic headwinds, but also with structural problems,
said Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel, presenting the Bundesbank’s new Forecast for Germany. The Bundesbank projects a slight decline of 0.2 % in real gross domestic product (GDP) in 2024 and only a slight rise in 2025. The labour market, too, is now responding noticeably to the protracted weakness of the economy. The inflation rate remains elevated in 2025, but is likely to return to 2 % in the years that follow.