In The News

Nayan Chanda December 22, 2008
Intricate global links among industries and suppliers mean the failure of one industry can be devastating for many others around the globe. “Outsourcing and off-shore production have changed the ecosystem of auto production so dramatically that the fate of millions of jobs all over the world hinges on a decision in Washington,” writes YaleGlobal editor Nayan Chanda in his column for Businessworld...
Ricardo Hausmann December 19, 2008
The global financial crisis has reduced savings of the world’s wealthiest nations, but that does not necessarily reduce their power, suggests Ricardo Hausmann, director of Harvard’s Center for International Development, in an essay for the Financial Times. Nations can retain power, depending on how they borrow or spend. “The financial meltdown has translated into a sudden stop in capital flows to...
Xu Sitao December 18, 2008
The international community hopes that China steps up as a global leader on a wide array of crises. But the West is then taken aback when China goes about pursuing policy with seeming unconcern about the world. This YaleGlobal series analyzes the growing divergence between China and the West over two issues – the global economic crisis and festering discontent in Tibet. Due to trade imbalances,...
Ashok Bardhan December 16, 2008
While the US financial markets were the source behind global credit calamity and still present tremendous uncertainty, foreign investors continue to demonstrate trust in US government institutions by increasing investments in US Treasuries. That trust gives policymakers time and space to work on significant imbalances in the areas of currency exchange rates, deficits and trade, explains Berkeley...
Michael Pettis December 15, 2008
Nations that engage in trading are not immune from the global economic crisis, as it spreads first throughout the trade-deficit, consumption nations and then on to the trade-surplus, producer nations, explains finance professor Michael Pettis for the Financial Times. Pettis offers three ways for the global economy to adjust: The rich countries can continue borrowing and consuming, or the trade-...
Barbara Demick December 15, 2008
A global economic downturn prompted consumers in the West to slow spending, disrupting hiring and payroll in China and sparking sporadic protests, reports Barbara Demick for the Los Angles Times. China’s growth and employment rates still surpass those in the US, yet any economic slowdown “could present the leadership with its biggest political challenge since the student protests at Tiananmen...
Matt Richtel November 19, 2008
Even as US automakers plead for government bailout funds, millions of dollars worth of foreign cars pile up at US docks. US Dealers decline the new vehicles because of a global credit crunch and consumer wariness about job loss. Japanese and German car companies resort to leasing space in US ports, and “They are turning dozens of acres of the nation’s second-largest container port into a parking...