Since the summer of 2008 the world has experienced the greatest destruction of wealth – paper losses measured in the trillions of dollars – in its history. No industry in the world has been left untouched. The financial powerhouses of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers have gone bankrupt and mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had to be bailed out. Attempts by the US government to save industries led to an increased budget deficit, making some experts predict that the global power epicenter might shift away from the US before the crisis ends. On the other hand, it has become clear that Asian countries need to restructure their domestic economies to encourage consumption. They cannot continue to rely on credit-fueled American consumption to promote growth. Consumer confidence remains low with fears of a double-dip or an anemic recovery being voiced daily. Some poor countries, insulated from foreign finance, suffered from reductions in tourism, remittances and foreign aid. What began as a local problem of excess credit in the United States is likely has affected every member of the global community. All crises in the twentieth century have had world-wide consequences but the crisis of 2008 will go down in history as the first full-blown global crisis.

As the World Revolts, The Great Powers Watch

Conflicts are many, and compromise is rare
John Lloyd
February 4, 2014

Reid Deals Body Blow to Obama on Trade

Move could threaten approval for TTP and TTIP
William Mauldin, Siobhan Hughes
January 31, 2014

Growth and Globalization Cannot Cure All the World’s Ills

Inequality and imbalanced growth lead to extremism
Gideon Rachman
January 30, 2014

The Shape of Things to Come

Investors remain intrigued by emerging economies
Gideon Rose, Jonathan Tepperman
January 27, 2014

How Globalization Isolates Struggling Cities

Struggling regions and cities should cooperate to build local ties
Aaron M. Renn
January 8, 2014

Putin’s Gas-Fueled Bailout of Ukraine

Europe may have given up too quickly on bailout and potential trade agreement
David R. Cameron
January 2, 2014

The Bad Bargain

Labor, to prevent eroding bargaining power, could organize globally
Daniel Altman
December 27, 2013