In The News

Ernesto Zedillo March 10, 2008
Fear of trade has emerged to be as potent a weapon in the hands of the Democratic candidates as fear of terrorism proved to be for the Republicans in the last two US elections. The unilateralist policies of the current administration have produced not only enormous negative political returns for those now in the White House, but also mean that the Republican candidate shoulders a heavy burden....
Susan Froetschel, Morgan Robinson March 3, 2008
Ohio, part of the country’s Rust Belt, was a swing state in the 2004 US presidential election, and the state’s voters will play a big role deciding the 2008 Democratic nominee and probably the next president of the United States. Their choice might set the US agenda for global economy. As one of the country’s leading manufacturing states, Ohio suffers as companies shift factory jobs to low-wage...
Matthew J. Slaughter September 28, 2007
Many workers in the US fear that the United Automobile Workers’ strike against General Motors signals that the domestic auto industry is “losing” at globalization. The strike has ended, but some workers urge the federal government to scale back US involvement in international trade, most notably with emerging markets like China. Economist Matthew Slaughter counters that globalization has netted...
David Dapice March 26, 2007
As manufacturing jobs continue to slip away from the US, Democrats in control of US Congress could be tempted to apply protectionist measures. But any regulations that attempt to restrict trade could backfire and chase more skilled jobs abroad. Economist David Dapice describes US economic problems – unbalanced budgets, a negative savings rate – as “home grown,” and the solutions require sacrifice...