In The News

Jihan El-Alaily August 12, 2003
The UN’s senior political advisor on Iraq, Ghassan Salame, is supportive of Iraq’s Interim Governing Council (IGC) and optimistic about US efforts to establish a democracy in the country. In an interview with the prominent Egyptian weekly, Al-Ahram, Salame admonishes Arab nations that criticize the US run interim government, saying they should not pass judgment without "first hand knowledge...
August 11, 2003
Two hundred years ago, the English navy blockaded French ports, cutting the country off from the sugar cane of tropical colonies and forcing Napoleon to push French farmers to grow beet sugar as a replacement. The blockade eventually ended, but the farming of beet sugar did not. Indeed, as this New York Times editorial points out, beet sugar is vehemently protected by EU agricultural policies...
John Burton August 7, 2003
Before this week's bombing of the Marriott Hotel in Jakarta, Indonesia's economy had been steadily recovering from the 1997 Asian financial crisis, and foreign investors have been arriving in droves. Singaporean companies in particular have been attracted to the country because of increased political stability and a lack of ties to the US economy. The Indonesian government has courted...
Aaron Kirchfeld August 1, 2003
Germany's efforts to rebuild its once extensive trade relationship with Iraq face many obstacles, not the least of which is residual tensions with the US from the Iraq War. The US and Britain remain reluctant to contract with companies from countries that did not support the coalition. At the same time, the German companies that are receiving contracts remain reluctant to discuss their...
Daniel Griswald July 27, 2003
Critics maintain that the Bush administration's efforts to sign bilateral trade agreements with Chile, Singapore, and a few other small nations threaten the global trading system. However, international trade specialist Daniel Griswald argues that bilateral agreements don't threaten the multilateral system, but advance it. Bilateral agreements not only open markets to US exporters, he...
Romeo Austria Reyes July 23, 2003
Although slow progress in aid, trade, and debt relief casts doubt on the feasibility of the Millennium Development Goals and the sincerity of rich nations to the Millennium Development Compact, Indonesia is generally making good progress toward realizing the development objectives. However, inter-provincial inequalities are plentiful. To ensure the good national trend is matched at the sub-...
Steven Greenhouse July 22, 2003
The conventional wisdom on globalization in the US has held that unskilled jobs will gradually shift overseas, leaving American workers free to perform higher-paid, white-collar jobs. But now that IBM is considering moving millions of white-collar jobs to countries like India and China, politicians and technology workers are crying foul. Corporations like IBM argue that moving service jobs...