As an alternative to the present system of intermediation of the German savings surplus, this paper suggests that the risk-adjusted rate of return could be improved by creating a sovereign wealth fund for Germany (designated DESWF), which could invest excess German savings globally. Such a DESWF would offer German savers a secure vehicle paying a guaranteed positive minimum real interest rate, with a top-up when real investment returns allowed. The vehicle would invest the funds in a portfolio that is highly diversified by geography and asset classes. Positive real returns can be expected in the long run based on positive real global growth. Since, in this case, a significant amount of funds would flow outside the euro area, the euro would ...
This paper proposes a two-step, market-based approach to debt reduction: · Step 1. The European Fina...
The pricing of sovereign credit risk is a necessary component of the financial architecture of the E...
Who benefits from the EU’s bailouts of crisis stricken countries? William Oman writes that internati...
As an alternative to the present system of intermediation of the German savings surplus, this paper ...
For decades, Germany has been generating large export surpluses. The associated accumulation of asse...
Germany has one of the highest current account surpluses in the world. This is criticised by its glo...
Despite cobbling together an impressive $1 trillion rescue package for countries with potential fund...
Current account deficits have caught the public’s attention as they have contributed to the European...
‘Blue’ or Eurobonds guaranteed via joint and several liability by the eurozone member states have be...
Current account deficits have caught the public’s attention as they have contributed to the European...
Germany is running a current account surplus of about 8% of GDP, which means that about one-third of...
In his latest Policy Brief, Daniel Gros gives a new angle on why the existence of current account ‘i...
Germany continues to be a major exporter of both goods and capital. In 2018, the current account sur...
Two of the banking union’s pillars – common European supervision by the European Central Bank and co...
John Doukas argues that Germany has been the only country in the European Union which benefitted fro...
This paper proposes a two-step, market-based approach to debt reduction: · Step 1. The European Fina...
The pricing of sovereign credit risk is a necessary component of the financial architecture of the E...
Who benefits from the EU’s bailouts of crisis stricken countries? William Oman writes that internati...
As an alternative to the present system of intermediation of the German savings surplus, this paper ...
For decades, Germany has been generating large export surpluses. The associated accumulation of asse...
Germany has one of the highest current account surpluses in the world. This is criticised by its glo...
Despite cobbling together an impressive $1 trillion rescue package for countries with potential fund...
Current account deficits have caught the public’s attention as they have contributed to the European...
‘Blue’ or Eurobonds guaranteed via joint and several liability by the eurozone member states have be...
Current account deficits have caught the public’s attention as they have contributed to the European...
Germany is running a current account surplus of about 8% of GDP, which means that about one-third of...
In his latest Policy Brief, Daniel Gros gives a new angle on why the existence of current account ‘i...
Germany continues to be a major exporter of both goods and capital. In 2018, the current account sur...
Two of the banking union’s pillars – common European supervision by the European Central Bank and co...
John Doukas argues that Germany has been the only country in the European Union which benefitted fro...
This paper proposes a two-step, market-based approach to debt reduction: · Step 1. The European Fina...
The pricing of sovereign credit risk is a necessary component of the financial architecture of the E...
Who benefits from the EU’s bailouts of crisis stricken countries? William Oman writes that internati...