In The News

Pierre Paulden June 3, 2010
Trust breaks down in banking when investors question whether deposits are safe and when banks worry about loan repayment. Banks only keep a percentage of cash on hand, and a lack of trust can disrupt efficient lending and borrowing with that limited cash. Global banks could have a capital deficit of $1.5 trillion, by some reports, and troubled banks could request additional government assistance...
Emily Maltby May 26, 2010
Any regulatory change creates winners and losers. Because of the strong trade relationship between China and the US, consumers and businesses in either country must adjust to changes from either government – and that includes the possibility of currency revaluation. Companies that export to China will benefit from revaluation, but the many small US businesses that depend on China for consistent...
Nayan Chanda May 24, 2010
Can a country withdraw from globalization, or for that matter, give up democracy in order to benefit from global capital flow? In this column, YaleGlobal editor Nayan Chanda dissects the recent argument offered by Harvard economist Dani Rodrik, who suggests that “economic globalization, political democracy, and the nation-state are mutually irreconcilable.” Crises that disrupt global capital...
Edmund Conway May 20, 2010
The debt crisis in Greece exposes challenges for lenders and borrowers throughout Europe – testing cooperation and governance on the continent. National governments disagree on many matters ranging from stricter regulations for hedge funds to a proposal requiring approval for national budgets from the European Commission. Politicians – seeking to maintain their hold on power – are wary of...
Nayan Chanda May 12, 2010
Carefree spending on borrowed funds is not sustainable. Europe could not handle fast assistance to debt-laden Greece on its own and had to turn to the International Monetary Fund for additional financial support. Eurozone nations and the IMF imposed stringent conditions, and future borrowing by the Greeks will carry heavy costs. “The same global liquidity that can fuel growth can also evaporate...
Zhiwu Chen May 12, 2010
Many economists and policy analysts maintain that resolving huge trade imbalances is easy – the Chinese government should just let the renminbi appreciate. But that quick fix won’t do much, contends Zhiwu Chen, professor of finance with the Yale School of Management. Revaluing the renminbi would shift manufacturing to other low-cost Asian nations, without spurring Chinese spending on US goods or...
Jean-Pierre Lehmann May 7, 2010
Internal divisions can endanger any union more than external threats. Mistrust – a lack of shared basic values or vision – can decimate cooperation, explains Jean-Pierre Lehmann, professor of political economy, in the second article of a two-part series analyzing the Greek debt crisis. Lehmann describes Greece’s immense debt load, the history of corruption, and their effect on the European Union...