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.

Economic Fixes Should Not Worsen Environmental Crisis

By ignoring environmental protections in financial-recovery packages, governments invite new crises
Dodo J. Thampapillai
October 19, 2011

So Many US Manufacturing Jobs, So Few Skilled Workers

Rejecting skilled trades, American students ignore demands of the job market
Lucia Mutikani
October 17, 2011

The Depression: If Only Things Were That Good

The 1930s gave birth to great technological innovations that eventually employed many
David Leonhardt
October 14, 2011

The Four Horsemen of Economics

A global economic path that’s unsustainable, unfair, unstable, unhappy – need not neglect well-being
Stewart Wallis
September 28, 2011

Going... Going... Greece on the Brink

Greece faces a choice – reform or populism, corruption and a mass sell-off of assets
Maria Margaronis
September 22, 2011

Portugal’s Jobless Graduates Flee to Africa and Brazil

Brain drain hits under-performing Portugal
Lucy Ash
September 13, 2011

Argentina Acts to Protect Local Films

The protectionist move targets Hollywood blockbusters
Jude Webber
September 7, 2011