In The News

Laurence Brahm December 15, 2011
The year 2011 has given rise to a wave of peaceful protests around the globe. In Tunisia, Egypt, Europe, the United States and now even Russia, citizens organize via social media, convene in public spaces and protest policies that fail to protect the public interest. Alarm is building about governments and corporations that mismanage diminishing resources, argues Laurence Brahm, attorney and...
Scott Barrett December 9, 2011
Europe’s rapid response to the debt crisis may have overshadowed the long-planned negotiations on climate change in Durban, but the contrast throws light on the problem of global governance, explains economist Scott Barrett. Both crises demonstrate the limits of collective action in the face of known dangers. In Europe, poor fiscal discipline by any euro member threatened other countries, he...
Jacob Funk Kirkegaard November 16, 2011
The slow-motion crisis of the euro seems to have reached a plateau with the formation of new governments in Greece and Italy. But Europe’s debt crisis is complex with far-reaching implications. In this two-part series, YaleGlobal examines the ramification of the crisis, the reform course Europe must take and the lessons that others can draw from it. In the first part of the series, Jacob Funk...
Erik Berglof November 16, 2011
Cross-border banking should not become a casualty of the clean-up act required for the eurozone crisis, argues Erik Berglof, the Chief Economist of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The gains from financial integration in Europe have been great, particularly through the actions of foreign subsidiaries of large European banks in emerging central and eastern European countries,...
Joshua Chaffin November 15, 2011
With European countries struggling to get a control on debt, the European Commission is taking steps to appoint one person responsible for scrutinizing finances. Rival commissioners could not over-ride disciplinary measures imposed by the commissioner for economics and monetary affairs on nations that overspend. “Commission officials argue that the new changes are necessary to prevent national...
Nouriel Roubini November 11, 2011
Italy is the world’s eighth largest economy and the government is now obliged to borrow at interest rates of 7 percent for daily operations. Italians have approved austerity reforms, but the nation’s €1,900 billion in debt may require restructuring, sending shudders among banks and investors. Restructuring won’t trigger economic growth, and reviving Italy’s credibility could require at least a...
Jonathan Fenby November 9, 2011
Mounds of unsustainable debt in wealthy nations threaten the global economy, and many of these nations must keep borrowing in demanding global markets for daily operations. The G20 summit in France, a meeting of the world’s most powerful economies, failed to develop a strategy to ease spending, protect bondholders and lift confidence among consumers and investors. The G20’s failure will have...