In The News

Steven Pearlstein August 4, 2008
An economic era centered around globalization could be fading away, argues columnist Steven Pearlstein for the Washington Post. Developing nations will continue benefiting from trade agreements, albeit without the frenetic fast growth, while developed nations will see fewer cost savings based on low wages in far-off lands. “It is not the protectionists of the AFL-CIO or CNN who are primarily to...
Salama A. Salama June 27, 2008
Tragedy unfolds in countries that fail to emphasize family planning or discourage people from having children they cannot afford – and economic hardship compounds the tragedy. Preaching and advertising fail to engage the poor in developing nations, particularly when large numbers are illiterate, argues Salama A. Salama for Al-Ahram Weekly. For some cultures, a large family represents economic...
Kerry Howley June 18, 2008
Wealthy countries tend to have lower birth rates – but now that trend has also emerged in rural areas with low literacy rates and few economic opportunities for women, such as Africa and South Asia. Other countries that once discouraged large families as an effort to eliminate poverty have since reversed course. “After 200 years of exponential population growth, and just four decades after...
Richard Smith June 17, 2008
The wealthiest countries spend lavishly on health care. The growing expenditures create entrenched health-care systems that provide an increasing share of employment in those nations. Technological innovation – from development of new drugs to life-saving equipment – in the health-care sector, unlike other industries, tends to make prices rise rather than fall, explains Richard Smith in an essay...
June 13, 2008
Countries that import food must check on producers’ sanitary standards, warn scientists attending an American Society for Microbiology meeting, reported on by Science Centric. Lower wages in developing nations and specialized growing environments contribute to the trends in food trade. The US imports more food than it exports, the article reports, and about 15 percent of food consumed in the US...
Michael Skapinker June 2, 2008
China’s push to develop its economy and improve the standard of living for its billion-plus population has not been without problems, including pollution, corruption, human-rights violations, and cover-ups through media censorship. Hosting the Olympics has invited attention on both economic success and the problems – not just for China but also for the many companies that do business there....
Joseph Chamie May 29, 2008
Induced abortion has been practiced throughout recorded history in all societies. While legal restrictions do not affect incidence, governments continue to debate appropriate reasons, technology, limits and ethics. The result is dilemmas. Even the strongest supporters of a woman’s right to choose may find themselves opposed to procedures conducted for trivial reasons, including sex selection,...