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.

Out of the Shadows

India is becoming of the top economic players. But are Australian companies ready to benefit?
Malcolm Maiden
February 7, 2005

Can the World Deliver for Africa?

Britain becomes the champion of African economic revival in 2005
Larry Elliott
February 2, 2005

When Life, and Not Just Carnival, Is a Gas

How multinational corporations and natural gas can change an island state
Andy Webb-Vidal
January 26, 2005

Euro Stabilizes After Dutch No Vote

Despite some alarmist predictions, the European currency makes a slight recovery after reaching low point
Steve Johnson
June 2, 2005

Power Hungry

An ActionAid report, released at the World Social Forum, provides six reasons to regulate global food corporations
January 31, 2005