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.

With US on the Brink of Default, Eyes are on Rating Agencies

Despite credit-rating agencies' past failures and suspicion of collusion, investors have nowhere to turn
David Dapice
July 26, 2011

Water Challenges Asia’s Rising Powers – Part I

Fierce competition over water threatens China’s economic progress and global food, energy prices
Keith Schneider
July 12, 2011

Globalization Reduced Poverty

Laurence Chandy and Geoffrey Gertz
July 5, 2011

As Number One, China to Face Hour of Choice

Big is not necessarily better – China must decide what to do with its economic might
Richard Bush
June 30, 2011

Asia Matters for America

The source for hundreds of thousands of US jobs is Asia
Satu Limaye
June 28, 2011

Growing Economies, Rising Problems – Part II

Global groups struggle with fast rise of poor nations, putting conflict on the horizon
Uri Dadush, William Shaw
June 23, 2011