In The News

Jeffrey E. Garten December 12, 2008
President-elect Barack Obama confronts a daunting array of immediate economic and security challenges. But that does not mean the Obama administration should neglect building stronger ties with China, urges Jeffrey Garten, international trade and finance professor at Yale and a former US undersecretary of commerce for international trade. China and the US need each other to boost a weakened...
Zhang Hong December 12, 2008
Unemployment is on the climb in China, possibly approaching as high as 20 percent, and that could trigger some social unrest. Having lost their jobs, several million migrant workers are returning to their rural homes. Journalist Zhang Hong suggests that any unrest will be minimal as long as workers can use their savings, reduce expenses and receive fair compensation for any work done. Students...
Patricia Kowsmann December 10, 2008
The global crisis, precipitated from the US financial market's losses, affects real economies in Southeast Asia: As travelers feel the squeeze, countries lower prospects for their once-lucrative tourism industries. Across the region, including Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines, authorities revise estimates for 2008 and no longer forecast a large annual gain in the tourism...
Clive Crook December 9, 2008
The ancient proverb of finding opportunity in crisis sounds wonderful, but the follow-through can be problematic. Transition staff working for US President-elect Barack Obama hope to enact health care reform and a clean-energy policy. But an economic crisis may not be the time to take on grand new initiatives, suggests Clive Crook, in an essay for the Financial Times. The Obama administration...
John Bringardner December 8, 2008
As a result of a credit crunch, closure of major investment banks and economic recession, many American law firms seek to expand internationally to sustain profits. Previously, lawyers were unwilling to move abroad, but the economy is shifting attitudes, as evidenced by increasing numbers of applicants to law firms abroad, especially in wealthy places like Dubai and Hong Kong. Lawyers anticipate...
Joshua Gallu December 5, 2008
Switzerland has long been known as “a custodian of the world’s wealth,” but the recent credit crunch has hit all banks hard and Swiss policies of isolation have not made the nation immune against effects of the economic downturn. The Swiss franc is losing value to the dollar, and the Swiss economy is expected to contract. Swiss bank UBS faced the biggest losses in Europe and had to be aided with...
Steven L. Raymer December 5, 2008
Indians still move abroad to work or study, but increasing numbers of restless immigrants are now turning to their ancestral land for opportunity. “By several estimates, between 50,000 and 60,000 information-technology professionals alone have returned to India from overseas since 2003, most to the suburbs of New Delhi, Hyderabad and especially Bangalore, the nexus of what Indians call their...