In The News

Stephen J, Adler and Jason Subler October 19, 2015
China’s President XI Jinping praises Britain for strengthening commercial ties with China. “Xi's visit comes amid debate in Britain and many other Western countries over what is the best way to engage with a Communist-ruled China that has grown more influential economically and diplomatically, but which maintains stances in areas from human rights to the South China Sea that are often at...
Jeff Spross October 9, 2015
Global poverty is in decline. The percentage of the world’s population living in extreme poverty is 14 percent, dropping by half since the early 1990s. Yet wages have stagnated in advanced economies like the United States. “The paradox is that both trends have probably been pushed along by the same forces: globalization and international trade,” reports Jeff Spross for the Week. Many workers in...
Joseph E. Stiglitz and Adam S. Hersh October 8, 2015
The Trans-Pacific Partnership is more about “managed trade” than “free trade,” argue economists Joseph Stiglitz and Adam Hersh. The agreement requires approval from legislators of 12 nations. Stiglitz and Hersh argue that industry protections in the agreement may curtail innovation in many areas: “Under these investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) systems, foreign investors gain new rights to...
Shawn Donnan and Demetri Sevastopulo October 6, 2015
Twelve nations reached agreement on a huge free-trade deal, the Trans-Pacific Partnership which covers labor conditions, environment protections, investor-state dispute settlement mechanisms, intellectual property and packaging laws. The partnership is expected to cover 40 percent of world trade and is described as a success for US President Barack Obama and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe for...
Debalina Ghoshal October 1, 2015
Diplomacy in Asia is complicated by religious conflict and sets of regional rivalries including Iran and Saudi Arabia, along with Pakistan and India. A deal on Iran’s nuclear program negotiated by the permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany, could test strategic relations in Asia and trigger a series of recalculations. In particular, strengthening Indian-Iranian ties could fray...
Nayan Chanda September 25, 2015
Governments and business owners should contain alarm over devaluation of the Chinese renminbi and low-cost goods. “Such is the fear of China’s export juggernaut that the news of the yuan’s devaluation brings about a kneejerk reaction, not only in India but all over the world,” writes Nayan Chanda, YaleGlobal’s founding editor and now consulting editor, in his column for Businessworld. “But not...
Lee Jong-Wha September 23, 2015
China’s economy is slowing its fast pace of growth. This year’s rate is projected at 6.3 percent. Lee Jong-Wha, an economics professor writing for Project Syndicate, points to weak domestic activity and external demand, falling fertility rates and an aging population, competition on wages from other nations, and a struggle to make productivity gains with technology. He suggests that China has...