Over the past decade, Chinese trade revenues, savings and purchases of US debt increased. Low interest rates encouraged US consumers to spend and housing prices soared. But such imbalances could not be sustained and financial instruments containing mortgages for homes that have lost their value, have proven toxic for the world. Economists and central bankers are still struggling to find a way out of the subprime mortgage crisis. If Japan’s lost decade offers lessons, then deflation must be averted at all costs if there is to be hope for a recovery.. But for the long-run, one magical phrase emerges from experts and that’s “stricter regulations for the banking industry.” Once governments succeed in restoring consumer and investor confidence, they should focus on designing regulations that encourage responsibility and a long-term outlook. Furthermore, policymakers have to recognize the need for global oversight of the banking industry, either by strengthening existing institutions or by creating new international authorities. The timing of the rescue is uncertain, and the certainty of its efficacy remains in question. To put the matter in historical perspective, there is still no consensus on whether government spending policies of Franklin D. Roosevelt or increased demand for goods created by Second World War pulled the United States out of the Great Depression. One certainty for this crisis: there are no localized solutions for a problem that extends throughout the world.

Fighting the Next Global Financial Crisis

Regulators must respond to shifting narratives embraced by investors
Robert J. Shiller
May 18, 2016

Managing Debt in an Overleveraged World

Investments in the future are less worrisome than funding current operations
Michael Spence
April 29, 2016

Memorandum to Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump

The next US president can rescue global trade and resuscitate the US workforce
From: Jeffrey E. Garten
April 28, 2016

OECD Issues Damning Report on Effect of Brexit

GDP per capita in the United Kingdom doubled with EU membership
Chris Giles
April 27, 2016

The $2 Trillion Project to Get Saudi Arabia’s Economy Off Oil

Country struggles to attract foreign investment with restrictions for women
Peter Waldman
April 26, 2016

A Tale of Two Countries

China is highly strategic in industrializing by acquiring foreign firms
Nayan Chanda
April 19, 2016

How to Save Brazil

Politicians must restore public confidence, and citizens must accept painful reforms
Luiz Felipe d’Avila
April 18, 2016