General Search
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.
-
Gold und Goldbarren
No English translation available
Verschiedene Fotos von Goldbarren im Tresor der Deutschen Bundesbank.
-
-
-
Announcement of auction – 6-months Bills of the European Stability Mechanism (ESM)
133 KB, PDF
-
Invitation to bid – Treasury discount paper (Unverzinsliche Schatzanweisungen – “Bubills”) of the Federal Republic of Germany
220 KB, PDF
-
Announcement – Federal Treasury discount paper (Bubills)
131 KB, PDF
-
The macroeconomic outlook: growth, inflation, and risks Introductory statement at the 89th Plenary meeting of the Group of Thirty
-
Bundesbank projections: German economy recovering only arduously – Nagel: “No all-clear signal yet for inflation”
-
Bundesbank symposium: Cash still has a valid role to play
16.06.2023 DE
Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel is expecting to see a further decline in the use of banknotes and coins. Even so, cash is
deeply embedded in our everyday lives
because of its unique characteristics, he said in a video message at the Bundesbank’s cash symposium in Berlin. Bundesbank Executive Board member Burkhard Balz stressed that cash still has a valid role to play even as payments become increasingly electronic. -
Bundesbank projections: Economy recovering only arduously
16.06.2023 DE
In the Bundesbank’s view, the German economy is recovering only arduously from the crises of the past three years. “In particular, the German economy is still struggling with the consequences of high inflation. This is reducing citizens’ purchasing power,” Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel said as he presented his institution’s latest projections. For the current year, the Bundesbank is expecting gross domestic product (GDP) to contract by 0.3% after adjustment for calendar effects. The economy is expected to expand again in 2024 and 2025, at rates of 1.2% and 1.3%, respectively.