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Perceptions and Reality: Public attitudes to immigration in Germany and Britain
A new report by Ipsos and Ipsos Germany compares public attitudes to immigration in Britain and Germany, showing them on very different paths. Generational analysis of the European Social Survey shows Germans have become much more positive than Britons about the economic impact of immigration over the last decade and also more consensual in their views. The British public, in contrast, are more divided, particularly along generational lines with older generations much more sceptical about the economic contribution of migrants.
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BACK TO GROWTH
Full-year 2013 revenue amounted to 1,712.4 million euros, down 4.3% compared with 2012. This decline reflects contradictory trends. There was a very negative effect from exchange rates of 4.4% -- the impact of translating revenues into euros was much higher than the 2.2% reported at the end of the first half and the 3.8% at the end of September.