In The News

Andrei Chang February 6, 2009
All over the continent, African nations stock up on a wide range of Chinese-made military weapons, vehicles and aircraft in exchange for oil, mineral and fishing rights – and other nations are closely monitoring the sales. “Analysts from the African military industry believe that China has fitted Russian Krasnopol semi-active laser-guided gun launch projectiles on its 155-mm howitzers,” reports...
Nayan Chanda February 6, 2009
As jobs vanish by the hundreds of thousands, the desire to intervene from politicians is only natural, an attempt to restore economic order and prevent social unrest. In capitals throughout Europe, workers protest and vow to remove politicians who fail to provide immediate economic relief. The US is no different, as the president and Congress race to save jobs with a stimulus package now valued...
Jeffrey E. Garten February 6, 2009
The warnings on protectionism are dire. Economists and historians repeatedly remind us about the danger of sliding into protectionism embodied in the notorious Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930. By raising import tariffs on thousands of goods, inviting retaliation, causing collapse of international trade, the act transformed a US recession into a Great Depression. Deepening anxiety about vanishing...
Toru Makinoda February 5, 2009
North Korea, one of the most closed nations in the world, may soon have more contact with China, with plans for a free trade zone on Wi Hwa Island. Chinese would not need visas, and the trade zone could increase food and other shipments into North Korea. Analysts suggest that North Korea could be using such a zone to pressure South Korea into continuing its policies of conciliation, reports Toru...
Neeta Lal February 5, 2009
Hit by gloomy news of global recession, consumers sharply curtailed purchases of luxury goods, putting millions of jobs in jeopardy. It took India four decades to position itself as a world leader in processing diamonds, reports Neeta Lal for the Asia Sentinel, but recession in the US reduced demand by 60 percent."The industry had been witnessing exponential growth for over two decades,...
Anthony Faiola February 4, 2009
A government can engage in protectionism by closing barriers and strictly limiting products that enter the country or taking steps to give its products a leg up. In 1930, US Congress limited imports, which prolonged the Depression, notes Anthony Faiola in an article for the Washington Post. Recognizing that free trade promotes widespread prosperity and diminishes conflict, governments formed the...
Edward Gresser February 2, 2009
With the rest of the world looking for leadership in emerging from economic crisis, how to stimulate the growth in China and the US has become the most urgent task. Other nations expect the pair to coordinate policy and do what they can to unfreeze credit, restore stable growth and ease unbalances. Currency rates are one of the ways to moderate swings in global growth and trade flows, explains...