Articles

  • 1 month ago | euractiv.es | Thomas Moller-Nielsen |Todos los artículos |Christine Lagarde

    Thomas Moller-Nielsen Euractiv Mar 6, 2025 14:55 Lectura de 3 min. Tipo de contenido: Idiomas: English | Français Fráncfort/Bruselas (Euractiv.com/.es) - El Banco Central Europeo (BCE) recortó este jueves los tipos de interés 25 puntos básicos, hasta el 2,5% y rebajó sus previsiones de crecimiento en la Eurozona por la debilidad del consumo, las tensiones comerciales mundiales y la incertidumbre geopolítica.

  • 2 months ago | u.today | Alex Dovbnya |Christine Lagarde

    Christine Lagarde, the president of the European Central Bank (ECB), has stated that Bitcoin will not be part of the reserves of any of the 27 central banks that are part of the General Council.    "I’m confident that Bitcoins will not enter the reserves of any of the central banks of the general council," she said.

  • Jan 23, 2025 | euractiv.es | Thomas Moller-Nielsen |Todos los artículos |Christine Lagarde |Robert Habeck

    Thomas Moller-Nielsen Euractiv Ene 23, 2025 11:57 Lectura de 3 min. Tipo de contenido: Davos (Suiza/Euractiv.com/.es) - La "pereza" de Europa y su inherente aversión al riesgo son en gran medida responsables del declive económico del bloque, ha advertido este jueves la Presidenta del Banco Central Europeo (BCE), Christine Lagarde, en el Foro Económico Mundial de Davos.

  • Dec 11, 2024 | almendron.com | Christine Lagarde

    Europe is not short of ideas, innovators or savings. Europeans save more of their income than Americans, and their share in global patent applications is close to that of the United States. But Europe often struggles to turn ideas into new technologies that can drive growth. One reason is that it is much less able than the United States to channel its significant savings into scaling up innovation. In response, the EU has spent years trying to build a “capital markets union”.

  • Dec 4, 2024 | ecb.europa.eu | Christine Lagarde

    Contribution by Christine Lagarde, President of the ECB to The Economist A fragmented financial infrastructure means that Europe gets less bang for its euroEurope is not short of ideas, innovators or savings. Europeans save more of their income than Americans, and their share in global patent applications is close to that of the United States. But Europe often struggles to turn ideas into new technologies that can drive growth.

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