In The News

Jeffrey E. Garten December 13, 2010
Asia increasingly accounts for a greater share of global revenues and financial clout. Yet power in global institutions, like the International Monetary Fund or the World Bank, is weighted toward the United States and other developed economies. Transition is underway in the global economic order. Jeffrey E. Garten, Yale University international trade and finance professor, warns that adjustment...
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard December 10, 2010
The price of borrowing is climbing for the US as investors like China and Russia unload holdings of US treasury bills. The US has massive debt, representing about 10 percent of its GDP, and struggles for fiscal responsibility in a range of government programs, including health-care and retirement for senior citizens. Meanwhile the US president and Congress contemplate renewing across-the-board...
Mark Landler, Sewell Chan November 22, 2010
Concerned that China prefers contention over cooperation, the US is organizing alliances with other nations in the region and from afar, reports the New York Times. Intended as a “united front,” the allies will attempt to counter China on a currency kept artificially low, territorial claims in the South China Sea, refusal to ship rare-earth minerals and other trade matters. A lack of trust...
Morgan Kelly November 16, 2010
Ireland’s decision in September to borrow from the European Central Bank to repay €55 billion in bonds of bankrupt Irish banks calmed markets for the time being. The outcome satisfied large European banks that held the bonds, but left the Irish government with an open-ended commitment to cover losses amounting to more than 20 percent of GDP. Writing for the Irish Times, economist Morgan Kelly...
Jackie Calmes November 15, 2010
A debt commission appointed by US President Barack Obama released a deficit-reduction draft plan with a long list of cuts in the federal workforce, defense and entitlement programs – along with simplifying the tax code, lowering tax rates for individuals and corporations while eliminating many tax breaks. The US budget ballooned under Obama's watch: Rescuing the economy from global crisis...
Ernesto Zedillo November 13, 2010
The G20 meeting of the world’s major economies concluded in Seoul without a serious plan for coordinating macroeconomic policies. Since the first G20 meeting in November 2008, global leaders have recognized that inconsistent, poorly coordinated policies spurred the global economic crisis along. But behaving like the mercantilists of old rather than world powers in the 21st century – delivering a...
Bruce Stokes November 12, 2010
Asia is seen as a pivotal region for US foreign policy, as demonstrated by US President Barack Obama's travels to India, Indonesia, Japan and South Korea. Despite setbacks for Obama's party in mid-term elections, he continues to win high public-approval ratings in many Asian nations, notes Bruce Stokes, contributing editor for the National Journal. With US voters expressing anger over...