 The ECB, for me personally, is a very important institution because it works for the values of Europe, for the European Union, and we do something for the greater good of all the people in Europe. And that's very special working here. What is special about working at the ECB, I think it's twofold. The first thing is this deep sense that you are making a meaningful contribution to something which is an enormous, ultimately historical project. To bring the peoples of Europe together via a single currency. And however small our contribution may be in this, we're all part of this. And that's just something that's very exciting, to be part of something deeply, deeply meaningful and something I personally very strongly believe in. And the second thing is to work with people from so different, many different nationalities, their different styles, their different humours, different, you know, sensitivities. To bring this together and to experience this richness every day, that is an enormous enrichment and an enormous satisfaction every day. So that's what makes it very special. I wanted always to work for Europe because I knew about the European institutions in Brussels and in Strasbourg and when I came to the ECB, I didn't really like my job in the beginning. I must admit, but afterwards when I was more involved and I was involved with the press and so on, this was my first task. I realised, oh yes, that's exactly what I wanted to be and to work and to communicate on Europe and I'm happy and proud to be part of the area, Euro, to be, you know, implementing it and communicating on it over the time. But this particularly special for working for the ECB is that I have in a way two worlds fused. I grew up in Frankfurt, maybe one of the fewer ones that really feels very home in this city and at the same time I feel I have Europe every time I enter with my bike this building and then I have the privilege to work with people from all over Europe, from Finland, Italy, Estonia, everywhere. And that combination of being grounded sort of in my hometown and at the same time really building Europe, I think that's fascinating. What I like very much is I like the feeling of being a public good, that I'm at the disposal of European citizens. So this is what I like most.