The Bundesbank


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Grad: Beograd-Zvezdara,
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ISBN: 074931138X 
Godina izdanja: 1993
Oblast: Ekonomija
Jezik: Engleski
Autor: Strani

David Marsh - The Bundesbank
Mandarin, 1993
359 str.
meki povez
stanje: vrlo dobro

The might of the D-Mark gives the Bundesbank greater influence over monetary policies across Europe - including in Britain - than most elected governments. In bringing to life the central bank and the people who run it, Marsh reveals its history, and present-day, behind-the-scenes arguments over European monetary union. David Marsh is the award-winning European Editor of `The Financial Times` and he is the author of `The New Germany: At the Crossroads`.

Marsh, a veteran reporter for the Financial Times draws on research in previously secret Bundesbank and government archives as well as more than 100 interviews with senior officials past and present to present this important account of the nature and role of the powerful German bank. Decisions made at this institution have impact throughout Europe, and throughout the world.

The Most Powerful Bank is the first-ever book-length examination of the powerful, highly secretive Bundesbank. The might of the Deutsche mark gives the Bundesbank greater influence over European monetary policies than most elected governments. With the ascendance of Germany as Europe`s premier financial power, the actions of the German central bank affect national economies and corporations around the world. No economy is exempt. As The Wall Street Journal has observed: `When Bundesbank President Helmut Schlesinger tightens the credit screws in Frankfurt, Caterpillar Inc. feels the pain in Peoria`. In this compelling and informative book, David Marsh, a veteran correspondent for the Financial Times, goes inside the Bundesbank and the inner workings of the churning German economy to provide a revealing portrait of what has often been called `the bank that rules Europe`. In bringing to life the Bundesbank and the people who run it, Marsh leaves no stone unturned. He draws on extensive research in previously secret Bundesbank and government archives, and more than a hundred interviews with senior officials, past and present, from all parts of the German economic establishment. His is the first detailed account of the nature and role of an organization that is little understood as it is extraordinary. Among a series of astonishing findings, Marsh reveals the continuity between the Bundesbank and the Reichsbank, the pre-1945 central bank which was at the heart of the Nazi state. Above all, Marsh offers a fresh vantage-point from which to examine the deep-seated political and economic changes underway at the heart of Europe. German unification, while adding considerably to Germany`s long-termpotential, confronts the country with its gravest challenge since the aftermath of the Second World War. With Germany struggling to master an unaccustomed surge in inflation, the Bundesbank is in the forefront of efforts to control post-unity economic turbulence. This has begun to disrupt the European Community`s planned move to political and monetary union. David Marsh`s investigation addresses a basic question of power: Who will control Europe`s money during the 1990s and beyond? The outcome is perhaps uncertain, but one thing is sure: The Bundesbank understands itself to be in a fight for survival.

Table of Contents:
1. The Hub of Europe
2. Safeguarding the Currency
3. Inside the Bundesbank
4. Partner in Catastrophe
5. The March of the Reichsmark
6. Continuity and Change
7. A Question of Interest
8. The Challenge of Unity
9. The Quest for Europe`s Money
10. Skirmishes Ahead.


Nonfiction, Economy, 074931138X 

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Predmet: 76646713
David Marsh - The Bundesbank
Mandarin, 1993
359 str.
meki povez
stanje: vrlo dobro

The might of the D-Mark gives the Bundesbank greater influence over monetary policies across Europe - including in Britain - than most elected governments. In bringing to life the central bank and the people who run it, Marsh reveals its history, and present-day, behind-the-scenes arguments over European monetary union. David Marsh is the award-winning European Editor of `The Financial Times` and he is the author of `The New Germany: At the Crossroads`.

Marsh, a veteran reporter for the Financial Times draws on research in previously secret Bundesbank and government archives as well as more than 100 interviews with senior officials past and present to present this important account of the nature and role of the powerful German bank. Decisions made at this institution have impact throughout Europe, and throughout the world.

The Most Powerful Bank is the first-ever book-length examination of the powerful, highly secretive Bundesbank. The might of the Deutsche mark gives the Bundesbank greater influence over European monetary policies than most elected governments. With the ascendance of Germany as Europe`s premier financial power, the actions of the German central bank affect national economies and corporations around the world. No economy is exempt. As The Wall Street Journal has observed: `When Bundesbank President Helmut Schlesinger tightens the credit screws in Frankfurt, Caterpillar Inc. feels the pain in Peoria`. In this compelling and informative book, David Marsh, a veteran correspondent for the Financial Times, goes inside the Bundesbank and the inner workings of the churning German economy to provide a revealing portrait of what has often been called `the bank that rules Europe`. In bringing to life the Bundesbank and the people who run it, Marsh leaves no stone unturned. He draws on extensive research in previously secret Bundesbank and government archives, and more than a hundred interviews with senior officials, past and present, from all parts of the German economic establishment. His is the first detailed account of the nature and role of an organization that is little understood as it is extraordinary. Among a series of astonishing findings, Marsh reveals the continuity between the Bundesbank and the Reichsbank, the pre-1945 central bank which was at the heart of the Nazi state. Above all, Marsh offers a fresh vantage-point from which to examine the deep-seated political and economic changes underway at the heart of Europe. German unification, while adding considerably to Germany`s long-termpotential, confronts the country with its gravest challenge since the aftermath of the Second World War. With Germany struggling to master an unaccustomed surge in inflation, the Bundesbank is in the forefront of efforts to control post-unity economic turbulence. This has begun to disrupt the European Community`s planned move to political and monetary union. David Marsh`s investigation addresses a basic question of power: Who will control Europe`s money during the 1990s and beyond? The outcome is perhaps uncertain, but one thing is sure: The Bundesbank understands itself to be in a fight for survival.

Table of Contents:
1. The Hub of Europe
2. Safeguarding the Currency
3. Inside the Bundesbank
4. Partner in Catastrophe
5. The March of the Reichsmark
6. Continuity and Change
7. A Question of Interest
8. The Challenge of Unity
9. The Quest for Europe`s Money
10. Skirmishes Ahead.


Nonfiction, Economy, 074931138X 
76646713 The Bundesbank

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