In The News

Franklin L. Lavin April 30, 2003
US President Bush and Singapore Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong met in Washington to sign a bilateral free trade agreement between the two countries. This will contribute to the opening up of barriers to economic globalization and, as Franklin Lavin, US ambassador to Singapore, points out, improve existing cross-border cooperation in the construction of barriers to two other facets of globalization...
SARS says we lose April 29, 2003
The rapid spread of SARS in several countries has historical precedence in the influenza epidemic of 1918. According to the author, 25% of Americans contracted the flu virus and 650,000 died from it. Worldwide, an estimated 70 million died from the flu. Just as the movement of men during World War I enabled the virus to spread internationally, the movement of individuals who have contracted...
Hans W. Vriens March 14, 2003
While many countries experience large inflows of foreign direct investment, Indonesia has a net outflow of investment monies. In two recent rankings, the country appeared at the bottom of the barrel in terms of economic integration with the world. Despite the elation of some Indonesian intellectuals at their country's de-globalized status, writes consultant Hans Vriens, economic...
M.J. Akbar March 6, 2003
Providing space for economic refugees is the key to maintaining a balanced globalization. The countries that have best accommodated economic refugees, like the US and India, are the ones that also tend to benefit the most from the skills these individuals bring. But the worry is that countries want cheap labor while constraining the diversity that migration entails. Multi-ethnic India serves as a...
Michael Yahuda February 19, 2003
Since the early 1990s, China has been making a concerted effort to integrate itself into the world economy and cultivate relations with its Asian neighbors, as well as the U.S., in order to promote stability and prosperity in the region. Michael Yahuda, professor of international relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science, explains how China's stance towards...
Harold James February 5, 2003
The debate about globalization has changed since September 11th. Princeton University history professor Harold James points out that the terrorist attacks have led to calls for more controls on the free flow of capital, goods, and people, while the Enron scandal has sparked debates about regulation of business practices. Citing numerous historical parallels, James shows how such responses to the...
Tom Friedman February 3, 2003
With the lengthening shadow of war and terrorism and the shrinking of the global market, many see globalization as receding, if not coming to its end. But one of the world's most well-known commentators on globalization, Thomas L. Friedman, the New York Times foreign affairs columnist, sees the trend by which the world is becoming smaller as unstoppable. In an interview with Nayan Chanda,...