The global economy thrives on globalization and the increasing interdependence of finance, production, consumption and trade. Such integration has reduced poverty, yet varying national policies along with ever-increasing speed of transactions and market news have also contributed to imbalances, both among nations and within. Regulations often do not keep pace in managing cross-border debt, foreign direct investment, corporate practices, tax codes or economic bubbles. The eurozone crisis and the US subprime mortgage crisis have demonstrated that one nation’s problems and panic can spread like wildfire. Nations must combine a competitive spirit with cooperation to achieve stable economic growth and sustainable prosperity.

G-20 Pledges to Avoid Devaluations in Push to Defuse Global Trade Tensions

Seeking balance, G-20 chiefs vow cooperation to let markets set currency values
Simon Kennedy, Eunkyung Seo
October 26, 2010

Taiwan's Medical Tourism Boom

Wealthy Chinese embrace medical tourism as a profit-making business
Jens Kastner
October 20, 2010

Jobless America Threatens to Bring Us All Down With It

US refusal to pay taxes increases debt and dangerous global imbalances
Jeremy Warner
October 15, 2010

Reverse Coupling

By building domestic markets, developing nations could revive the global economy
Nayan Chanda
October 11, 2010

More Countries Adopt China’s Tactics on Currency

Global downturn lures countries into ‘beggar-thy-neighbor’ currency moves
David E. Sanger, Michael Wines
October 11, 2010