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Deutsche Bank AGLobbying Costs 2,000,000€ - 2,249,999€ Financial year: Jan 2023 - Dec 2023 Lobbyists (Full time equivalent)Lobbyists with EP accreditationHigh-level Commission meetingsLobbying Costs over the years{"2012":1900000,"2013":1990000,"2014":3969000,"2015":3904000,"2016":3379000,"2018":3287000,"2019":1875000,"2020":1875000,"2021":1750000,"2022":1500000,"2023":2000000} - Info
Deutsche Bank AG EU Transparency Register271912611231-56 First registered on 30 May 2013 Goals / RemitDeutsche Bank provides commercial and investment banking, retail banking, transaction banking and asset and wealth management products and services to corporations, governments, institutional investors, small and medium-sized businesses, and private individuals. Deutsche Bank is Germany’s leading bank, with a strong position in Europe and a significant presence in the Americas and Asia Pacific. By providing its expertise in financial matters, Deutsche Bank is committed, to contribute to the EU's efforts to enhance the regulatory framework ensuring for more stable and resilient financial markets and to continue the Union’s path to growth and more jobs. In this context, DB’s Government and Public Affairs department acts as the bank's link to the EU institutions to facilitate the dialogue with European policymakers. Main EU files targetedProposal amending Capital Requirements Regulation and Directive to implement Final Basel and related Delegated Acts Crisis Management and Deposit Insurance review Review of the EU macroprudential framework Review of the EU securitisation framework European Deposi SummarySee below for video, photos and materials. The debate focused on the ambivalences that emerge from public and official data and surveys. The data illustrate the transformation of German society caused by migration. The population is very diverse, with a high proportion of people with a “migration background”. Among these, some are “naturalised Germans”, with German citizenship and often ancestors that moved to Germany at least one generation ago. Others are “foreigners”, born in a different country from non-German parents. This diversity is not uniformly distributed across the country: a significant majority of people with a “migration background” is concentrated in the western part of Germany (96%). According to the contact hypothesis theory, people experience fewer xenophobic feelings the closer they are in contact with migrants. Indeed, this theory finds evidence in the fact that discrimination seems to be more widespread in the eastern part of Germany, where a tiny proportion of immigrants actually reside. The main ambivalence is revealed to be a clash between cognitive acceptance of diversity and emotional distance towards those that look different. Indeed, a big proportion of the German population seems to be perfectly aware of the positive effects that migration might have on the national economy and is convinced that the country will be able to cope with the huge inflow of people expected to arrive in the coming period. However, surveys also report evidence of xenophobic feelings such as the inability to consider as “German” someone showing typically “Muslim” features and traits. One possible explanation for these ambivalences is the different public perception of the population of migrants already in a given country versus the huge flows of people that characterise migration waves themselves. People feelings and perceptions are driven much more by these acute “invasions” than by the absolute numbers compared to the total population (m Gianluigi Ferrucci2017 Journal of International Money and Finance, vol 79, pp. 72-98 (December 2017) Determinants of sub-sovereign bond yield spreads – The role of fiscal fundamentals and federal bailout expectations - Roland Beck, Gianluigi Ferrucci, Arno Hantzsche and Matthias Rau-Göhring
2012 International Journal of Central Banking, vol 8, No 1, pp 179-217 (March 2012) Food price pass-through in the euro area: non-linearities and the role of the common agricultural policy - Gianluigi Ferrucci, Rebeca Jiménez-Rodríguez and Luca Onorante
2010 Paper presented at the Conference by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York “Consumer Inflation Expectations”, (November 2010) Consumers’ quantitative inflation perceptions and expectations in the euro area: an evaluation - Olivier Biau, Heinz Dieden, Gianluigi Ferrucci, Roberta Friz and Staffan Linden
2010 In Vincenzo D’Apice and Giovanni Ferri (eds), Financial Instability: Toolkit for Interpreting Boom and Bust Cycles, Palgrave Macmillan Studies in Banking and Financial Institutions, (June 2010) The output losses and fiscal costs of the financial crisis 2005 Journal of the European Economic Association, vol 3, No 2-3, pp 556-566, (April-May 2005) Liquidity Risk and Contagion - Rodrigo Cifuentes, Gianluigi Ferrucci and Hyun Hong Shin
2004 Bank of England Financial Stability Review (June 2004) Understanding Capital Flows to Emerging Market Economies within a Push/Pull Framework - Gianluigi Ferrucci, Valerie Herzberg, Farouk Soussa and Ashley Taylor
2003 Bank of England Working Paper, n. 205 (October 2003) Empirical Determinants of Emerging Market Economies’ Sovereign Bond Spreads 2003 Bank of England Financial Stability Review (June 2003) Assessing Sovereign Debt under Uncertainty - Gianluigi Ferrucci and Adrian Penalver
- Gianluigi Ferrucci, Valerie Herzberg,
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