In The News

March 23, 2009
The IMF concludes that a lack of regulation – not global imbalances – led to crisis, and “the distinction has important consequences for whether macroeconomic policy or more regulation of financial markets will provide the solutions to the mess,” reports the Economist. Economists examine the root causes, comparing problems to previous crises to develop solutions and prevent repeats. “The IMF...
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...
Xu Sitao January 24, 2008
As anxiety spread about a possible recession hitting the US, stock-indexes went into sharp decline in Europe and Asia. Not surprisingly, worried investors scrutinize the Chinese stock market, as conventional wisdom suggests that China investments are the world’s next over-valued bubble. But analyst Steven Xu points out that the Chinese market could continue to grow, especially this year as China...
David Dapice January 22, 2008
Stock-market indexes have tumbled like dominos around the globe, exposing vulnerability of intricate economic connections. A crisis in one nation – and the panic – can quickly bounce from one country to the next. A major cause behind the stock-market plunges the world over are US financial instruments designed to spread and protect risk by including all manner of home mortgages, explains...
Susan Froetschel January 3, 2008
Despite exponentially-advancing understanding of economic forces over the 20th century, Adam Smith’s invisible hand continues to elude. In his recently published book none other than former Chairman of the US Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan essentially throws up his hands. Every time a financial crisis hits the world, like the current turmoil caused by sub-prime mortgage lending in the US, calls...
David Roche December 17, 2007
The sub-prime mortgage crisis – the big stack of US home loans that went to people who could not afford payments – has led to a global credit crunch. Record low interest rates created a huge supply of credit, which in turn led to higher prices for homes and other assets. An appetite for risk, rather than actual asset values or funds backing the loans, drove the supply of credit and the price for...
Sebastian Mallaby November 14, 2007
Overseas investors are skittish about investing in the US, in light of the recent sub-prime mortgage defaults. The US government functions by taking on debt. But as foreign investors resist investing in low-yield government notes and similar instruments described as low risk, the dollar sinks in value. The value of many currencies and commodities, including oil, are linked to the dollar. So many...