In The News

Joergen Oerstroem Moeller July 28, 2009
The global financial crisis is far from over, and Joergen Oerstroem Moeller argues for a stimulation in global demand. Unfortunately, the big drivers of demand growth in the past – primarily the US, but also Japan and Europe – each face major hurdles sufficiently large to suggest they won’t be the engines of growth in the immediate future. So Moeller recommends looking to China. Critics counter...
Floyd Norris July 24, 2009
Globalization seems to be receding in the world of banking not because the banks themselves have turned inward, but because governments are now more local in focus. Moreover, the desire or need to find a scapegoat for the crisis has also chipped away at globalization’s edifice: the Federal Reserve and the Treasury in the US have had to defend in Congress their actions during, rather than their...
Anthony Faiola June 26, 2009
A number of experts believe the US dollar is unlikely to retain its title as the world’s reserve currency due to structural changes in the global economy and the mounting US deficit. For instance, China appears to be taking a stronger stance on the yuan’s global role, though the currency remains relatively unusable in large international transactions. Meanwhile the International Monetary Fund is...
Branko Milanovic May 4, 2009
The global financial crisis that has devastated the world economy has spawned a growing literature on its causes. In part one of our two-part series, World Bank economist and Carnegie Endowment scholar Branko Milanovic argues that while analysts can quibble over the contributing factors to the financial meltdown, a deeper, more fundamental problem was the real cause: income inequality. Growing...
Katinka Barysch April 17, 2009
At the G-20 meeting and subsequent media commentaries, focus has been on the travails of the European Union. But Eastern Europe is often lost sight of in the expression of cautious optimism about the EU economy weathering the storm. The former Soviet bloc countries, cautions analyst Katinka Barysch, are still at risk from the financial crisis with serious negative consequences for the West. Many...
Nayan Chanda April 9, 2009
The G-20 leaders, though accustomed to protests and denouncements, may find resisting protectionism even more arduous. But with the International Labour Organization forecasting a loss of 50 million jobs globally due to the current recession, refraining from protectionism is precisely what is required. Thus far, however, only three countries from the G-20 have kept their pledge to refrain, while...
Jeffrey E. Garten March 30, 2009
The world’s eye will be on the summit of the Group of 20 meeting in London on April 2. As the member nations – from Argentina to the United States – represent 80 percent of world trade, their decision will have an immediate and direct bearing on the global economic recession roiling the world. Doubts and anger emerge in nations that have long embraced capitalistic principles and free and open...