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.
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The two-sided effect of financial globalization on output volatility Discussion paper 07/2011: Barbara Meller
793 KB, PDF
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Pooling versus model selection for nowcasting with many predictors: an application to German GDP Discussion paper 03/2009: Vladimir Kuzin, Massimiliano Marcellino, Christian Schumacher
403 KB, PDF
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Transitions in the German labor market: structure and crisis Discussion paper 34/2011: Michael U. Krause, Harald Uhlig
523 KB, PDF
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Estimating Bilateral Exposures in the German Interbank Market: Is there a Danger of Contagion? Discussion paper 09/2002: Christian Upper, Andreas Worms
196 KB, PDF
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Rebalancing the euro area: Is wage adjustment in Germany the answer? Discussion paper 17/2020: Mathias Hoffmann, Martin Kliem, Michael Krause, Stephane Moyen, Radek Sauer
2 MB, PDF
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Capital market statistics - November 2015 Statistical Supplement 2 to the Monthly Report
1005 KB, PDF
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The role of central bank knowledge and trust for the public’s inflation expectations Discussion paper 32/2018: Sathya Mellina, Tobias Schmidt
1 MB, PDF
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Financial exchange rates and international currency exposures Discussion paper 22/2008: Philip R. Lane, Jay C. Shambaugh
470 KB, PDF
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Pitfalls in the European Enlargement Process - Financial Instability and Real Divergence Discussion paper 06/2002: Helmut Wagner
293 KB, PDF
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Does intra-firm bargaining matter for business cycle dynamics? Discussion paper 17/2007: Michael Krause, Thomas Lubik
329 KB, PDF
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Capital market statistics - May 2019 Statistical Supplement 2 to the Monthly Report
771 KB, PDF
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Capital market statistics - October 2015 Statistical Supplement 2 to the Monthly Report
979 KB, PDF
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Banks that trade securities grant fewer loans Research Brief | 3rd edition – April 2016
In the United States and Europe, efforts are being made to limit banks' proprietary trading of securities. A key argument is that if banks invest in securities, they reduce the credit supply to the real economy. A new study uses microdata to examine the role of proprietary trading in times of crisis and its impact on lending activity.
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Banks´ regulatory buffers, liquidity networks and monetary policy transmission Discussion paper 06/2006: Christian Merkl, Stéphanie Marie Stolz
179 KB, PDF
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Report on the stability of the German financial system Article from the Monthly report October 2004
1 MB, PDF