In The News

Bashir Goth October 7, 2008
As with politics, extremist and rigid economic policies cannot be sustained. As investor trust wanes and a credit crunch grips the globe, critics lash out. But extremist responses, pure capitalism or pure socialism, are inappropriate, suggests Bashir Goth writing for PostGlobal, moderated by Fareed Zakaria of Newsweek and David Ignatius of the Washington Post. “Just like we need and preach...
Nayan Chanda October 1, 2008
Global commerce depends on an odd combination of desires, the pursuit of profits and a need to please diverse customers. “The search for ever higher returns has driven traders and financiers ever since humans have learned to exchange goods or sought to grow their wealth through investments,” explains Nayan Chanda, editor of YaleGlobal in his regular column for Businessworld. Financiers on Wall...
Linda Lim September 29, 2008
During the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, US financial experts lectured Asians to accept good governance, transparency and free-market outcomes while avoiding drastic government intervention. Asian nations indeed tightened their belts, saving funds and seeking out safe havens for funds, including US Treasury bills. “This inflow of foreign lending conveniently enabled the Bush administration to...
Bob Davis September 29, 2008
A credit crisis combined with immense US government, corporate and personal debt has left the country with a cash-flow problem. The Bush administration and US Congress present a $700 billion government rescue for flailing financial institutions, but that plan depends on someone purchasing US Treasury bills to pay the bill. If foreign investors were to reject such Treasury notes, interest rates...
Martin Wolf September 24, 2008
World creditors came to a sudden conclusion – that US deficit spending at the household and government levels is highly dangerous and unsustainable – and as a result hang on tight to any money they hold. Spending and lending has slowed drastically. Major institutions – lending agencies, investment banks, insurance firms – have come close to folding, and the Bush administration has reversed all...
Steven Pearlstein September 24, 2008
The global economy is in crisis, with giant financial institutions folding, banks refusing to lend to other banks and some countries closing, changing stock-market rules and currencies dropping in value. “What we are witnessing may be the greatest destruction of financial wealth that the world has ever seen – paper losses measured in the trillions of dollars,” writes Steven Pearlstein for the...
Jamil Anderlini September 19, 2008
China’s government has an immense pool of savings, which has ballooned in value over the past eight years, and decisions about how to invest or spend that cash influences other nations and industries. One fund, Chinese Investment Corp., is more open than the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, which manages the world’s largest foreign-exchange reserves. The Chinese funds have gradually...