WEEKLY SERIES

THOUGHT LEADERS

GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES

INTERNATIONAL INSIGHT

MIND AND MATTER

SPECIAL SERIES

PROJECT SYNDICATE

COMMENTARIES

COMMENTARIES

  • John Stewart Mill vs. the European Central Bank

    J. Bradford DeLong Series: Anatomy of the Global Economy
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    2010-07-29
    When demand for government bonds is high, as it is nowadays, governments should increase the supply. That lesson, bequeathed to us by John Stewart Mill, is one that the core economies of the global North, as well as the European Central Bank, do not seem to have learned.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 0
  • Balancing China’s High Savings

    Fan Gang Series: Enter the Dragon
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    2010-07-29
    When a developing country has a high savings rate as a result of structural factors, as China does, the best strategy is not to reduce savings through dramatic exchange-rate appreciation, which may kill export industries overnight. Rather, savings should be channeled even more – and more efficiently – to domestic investment in order to avoid large external imbalances.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 441
  • Africa’s Economic House Divided

    Sanou Mbaye Series: Into Africa
    2010-07-29
    Across Africa, almost all governments praise economic modernization as the cornerstone of prosperity and the yardstick by which their effectiveness should be measured. But too many African leaders have been willing to spend a fortune to equip their countries with state-of-the-art settlement systems, only then to proceed to exclude their citizens from using them.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 136
  • Open-Source Pharmaceuticals?

    Jackie Hunter Series: Health and Medicine
    2010-07-28
    Much attention has been focused on the pharmaceutical industry’s slowness to develop new drugs and lack of productivity. But the real problem is that pharmaceutical companies cannot sustain their R&D departments, suggesting that they should look to other industries, such as computer software, for examples of pre-competitive collaboration.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 1114
  • Indianomics

    Jaswant Singh Series: Frontiers of Growth
    2010-07-28
    India is at the threshold of an era of unprecedented growth. But to cross it, Indians must craft a new idea of India – as the flagship of a modern global economy that unleashes the dynamism of all citizens.... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 0   Read: 1293
  • Is Middle East War Inevitable?

    Volker Perthes Series: The World in Words
    2010-07-28
    No one in the Middle East is calling for war, but a dangerous pre-war mood is growing. Four factors, none of them new but each destabilizing on its own, are compounding one another: lack of hope, dangerous governmental policies, a regional power vacuum, and the absence of active external mediation. ... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 1   Read: 1400
  • Making Sense of the Climate Impasse

    Jeffrey D. Sachs Series: Economics and Justice
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    2010-07-28
    Intense heat waves are currently hitting many parts of the world: the first five months of this year were the warmest on record going back to 1880, and May was the warmest month ever. So why do we still fail to act?... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 0   Read: 1645
  • How to Pay a Banker

    Lucian Bebchuk Series: The Rules Of The Game
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    2010-07-27
    It is now widely accepted that it is important to reward bankers for long-term results, because tying their compensation to short-term returns encourages them to take excessive risks. But tying executive payoffs to long-term results does not provide a complete answer to the challenge facing financial firms and regulators.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 1751
  • Convicts for Export

    Brahma Chellaney Series: Human Rights
    2010-07-27
    China has devised a novel strategy to relieve pressure on its overcrowded prisons: employ convicts as laborers on overseas projects. The practice has exposed another facet of China’s egregious human-rights record, which, when it comes to Chinese overseas companies’ overseas, includes the government’s failure to enforce its own regulations.... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 0   Read: 1553
  • The Hidden Future of the US Economy

    Martin Feldstein Series: The Magic of the Market
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    2010-07-27
    Just how bad is the outlook for the US economy? Unfortunately, you cannot tell from the forecasts, though many economists are raising their odds on a double-dip recession as government stimulus programs end and spending declines.... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 2   Read: 3676
  • Europe’s Federalism Debate Revived

    Jean Pisani-Ferry Series: Reuniting Europe
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    2010-07-27
    It is an old debate, but tensions within the euro area have revived it: can a monetary union survive without some form of fiscal federalism? If not, what kind of federalism is right for Europe?... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 1489
  • The Recession Dating Game

    Michael Boskin Series: Transatlantic Perspectives
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    2010-07-26
    The optimism that emerged in the early stages of the recovery from the financial crisis and recession has given way to more sobering assessments, with fear of a double-dip recession rising. But, depending on how we date when a recession begins and ends, double-dip recessions are more the rule than the exception. ... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 4482
  • Russia's Great Gas Game

    Joschka Fischer Series: The Rebel Realist
    2010-07-26
    The primary goal of Russian gas policy isn’t economic, but political, namely to further the aim of revising the post-Soviet order in Europe – a quest that is directed mainly at Ukraine. De-regulating the EU gas market and reducing Russia's importance as a transit country for ex-Soviet producers would hold that ambition in check.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 2310
  • Are We Really Secessionists Now?

    Robert Howse and Ruti Teitel Series: The Worldly Philosophers
    2010-07-26
    The World Court’s recent ruling on Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of independence is being widely touted as giving a green light to secessionist movements to gain statehood. In fact, it does no such thing, as the Court itself repeatedly emphasized.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 1735
  • The Middle Kingdom’s Middle Class

    Wellington K.K. Chan Series: China Stands Up
    2010-07-26
    There are compelling demographic, geographic, and broadly cultural reasons for China's spectacular success in the three decades since the lauch of Deng Xiaoping's economic reforms. But surely China’s success has depended on that of its entrepreneurs – and their deeply rooted patterns of activity.... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 1   Read: 2576
  • Pakistan’s Moral-Hazard Economy

    Shahid Javed Burki Series: Frontiers of Growth
    2010-07-23
    Foreign donors must insist that Pakistan reform its economy in order to escape the moral hazard implied by continued dependence on aid flows. But that outcome is much more likely if democracy flourishes throughout the country.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 1   Read: 2520
  • Hezbollah in a Corner

    Paul Salem Series: Islam
    2010-07-23
    The future of Hezbollah has never looked more uncertain. Indeed, given the recent death of Grand Ayatollah Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah, rising tension with Israel, and possible international criminal indictments of its operatives, Hezbollah appears to be hemmed in on all sides.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 1   Read: 3274
  • Power to the People

    Carlos Slim and Kandeh K. Yumkella Series: Earth in the Balance
    2010-07-23
    UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Advisory Group on Energy and Climate Change is calling for the international community to commit to universal access to modern energy services by 2030. The financial implications of meeting this goal are large, but not overwhelming when weighed against the enormous benefits. ... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 1   Read: 2230
  • Life by the Numbers

    Esther Dyson Series: Net World
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    2010-07-22
    Almost everyone is faced at some point with decisions about medical treatments and side-effects, for themselves and for loved ones. The most important thing to understand in such situations is statistics.... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 1   Read: 2611
  • Who Should Safeguard Financial Stability?

    Robert J. Shiller Series: Finance in the 21st Century
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    2010-07-22
    Central bankers around the world failed to see the current financial crisis coming before its beginnings in 2007, and thus did not act to relieve the pressures that led to it. But central bankers are still the people who are in the best political and institutional position to ensure financial stability.... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 0   Read: 5518
  • The Sumo and the Yakuza

    Masahiro Matsumura Series: The Asian Century
    2010-07-21
    Allegations of match-fixing, dope-smoking, orgies, and ties to gangsters among the sport’s top stars have enraged the Japanese public and mobilized the police. But Sumo's alleged ties with the Yakuza, Japan's ancient organized-crime groups, partly reflect the country's economic malaise, which has cost the sport its more respectable patrons.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 5213
  • Running in Place on Trade

    Jagdish Bhagwati Series: The Open Economy and Its Enemies
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    2010-07-20
    G-20 meetings regularly affirm the importance of maintaining and strengthening openness in trade, and June’s summit in Toronto was no different. Yet talk is cheap, and the open-mouth policy of (generally pro-trade) pronouncements has not been matched by action.... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 0   Read: 5274
  • Consolidators versus Stimulators

    Robert Skidelsky Series: Against the Current
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    2010-07-20
    The classical view of the economy, which Keynes set out to demolish, is not only alive, but in recent years has been dominant, feeding the belief that competitive markets can regulate themselves, will always provide as much employment as is wanted, and are immune to large-scale collapse. Now the believers are clamoring for fiscal consolidation worldwide. ... read
    Comments: 4   Recommended: 0   Read: 6119
  • The End of Automotive Mobility?

    Brian Ladd Series: Earth in the Balance
    2010-07-19
    Economists who blithely assume that pre-2008 automobile sales are “normal,” because Americans “need” their cars, misunderstand the nature of the automobile market. Enormous cars, long commutes, and vast parking lots do have their advantages, but we could manage to live without them – and we may have to sooner rather than later.... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 0   Read: 3195
  • Russia’s Lost Opportunity with Japan

    Yuriko Koike Series: Asia Watch
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    2010-07-19
    The recent exchange of spies between Russia and the US appears to demonstrate that the “reset” in bilateral relations has worked. But Russia failure to “reset” its relations with Japan is not only a lost opportunity, given Russia’s need to modernize its economy, but also a strategic error in view of Russia’s increasing worries about China.... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 0   Read: 2741
  • Europe’s Vision Deficit

    Guy Sorman Series: The World in Words
    2010-07-19
    What makes Europe's desolate economic landscape even gloomier is European leaders’ striking inability to explain it to their citizens. Indeed, it seems that here lies the seminal reason for their plunging poll ratings: they seem to lead nowhere, because they have no vision on which to draw.... read
    Comments: 3   Recommended: 1   Read: 4396
  • Asia’s Leadership Gap

    Simon Tay Series: The Asian Century
    2010-07-19
    This week, ten foreign ministers from ASEAN are meeting in Hanoi, and will then host their counterparts from across the region, including US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. ASEAN meetings are sometimes criticized as “talking shops,” but this time dialogue and strategic leadership are needed immensely.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 2799
  • The French Way of Crisis

    Michel Rocard Series: The Statesmen's Debate
    2010-07-16
    France is in disarray, with Nicolas Sarkozy’s popularity at the lowest point seen in decades for a French president and scandal roiling the government. But the deeper problem is that the French are less happy, and less optimistic about the future, than they once were - or than citizens of other countries are now.... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 3   Read: 4202
  • Double-Dip Days

    Nouriel Roubini Series: After the Storm
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    2010-07-16
    With the world economy set to slow, a scenario in which US growth slumps to 1.5%, the eurozone and Japan stagnate, and China’s growth rate falls below 8% may not imply a global contraction, but it will feel like one. And any additional shock – a highly plausible concern – could tip the global economy back into full-fledged recession.... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 1   Read: 23727
  • In Finance We Distrust

    Michael Spence Series: The New Wealth of Nations
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    2010-07-16
    It now seems universally accepted that government should establish the structure and rules for the financial system, with participants then pursuing their self-interest within that framework. But in a complex system in which expertise, insight, and real-time information are widely dispersed – and trust is lacking – reliance on such a framework seems deficient and unwise. ... read
    Comments: 3   Recommended: 2   Read: 6134
  • The Uses and Abuses of Economic Ideology

    Adair Turner Series: Frontiers of Growth
    2010-07-15
    John Maynard Keyenes once wrote that, "Practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influences, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist.” But today the greater danger is that practical men and women gravitate to vulgar versions of the dominant beliefs of economists who are very much alive.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 7663
  • Youth Without Work

    Edoardo Campanella Series: Europe at Home and Abroad
    2010-07-14
    Among the many devastating effects of the current global financial crisis, one of the most pernicious in the developed world is the upward trajectory of youth unemployment. When young people cease to be the engine of an economy, long-run economic growth is endangered, and social unrest becomes a real threat to the democratic political order.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 2   Read: 4321
  • A Roosevelt Moment for America’s Megabanks?

    Simon Johnson Series: The Hopeful Science
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    2010-07-14
    Just over a hundred years ago, the US led the world in terms of rethinking how big business worked – and when the power of such firms should be constrained - by enacting the Sherman Antitrust Act. The Dodd-Frank financial-reform bill, which is about to pass the US Senate, does something similar – and long overdue – for banking.... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 3   Read: 29391
  • Affordable Green Energy

    Bjørn Lomborg Series: Global Warning
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    2010-07-14
    The dominant approach to addressing climate change – subsidizing inefficient technologies or making fossil fuels too expensive to use - cannot possibly achieve the goal of reducing greenhouse-gas emissions by 50% by mid-century. Instead, we should fund the basic research that will make green energy too cheap and easy to resist.... read
    Comments: 4   Recommended: 0   Read: 5434
  • A Drug War on Auto-Pilot

    Ivan Briscoe Series: Latin America
    2010-07-13
    The "war on drugs" in Latin America has been an abject failure. It is time for a serious reconsideration of the status and regulation of illegal drugs, one that points to selective legalization, as well as to reclassification of the market for drugs as a public-health, rather than a criminal, concern.... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 1   Read: 3107
  • Fiscal Fibs and Follies

    Barry Eichengreen Series: The Next Financial Order
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    2010-07-13
    Across the globe, the debate over fiscal consolidation has the distinct sound of two sides talking past one another. Whereas severely distressed southern European states may well benefit from cutting their budget deficits, those arguing for fiscal consolidation in the major G-20 economies are playing a dangerous game.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 5194
  • Justice for Srebrenica’s Dead

    Chuck Sudetic Series: Human Rights
    2010-07-12
    Fifteen years ago, Serb soldiers overran the Bosnian town of Srebrenica – despite its status as a “safe area” under UN protection – and proceeded to expel the town’s people and execute 7,600 captives. Out of this massacre, however, have come significant achievements in the cause of international justice.... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 2   Read: 1994
  • De Gaulle at the Barricades

    Jonathan Fenby Series: The World in Words
    2010-07-12
    This is a busy year for round-number anniversaries for France’s greatest leader since Napoleon: Charles de Gaulle was born 120 years ago, died 40 years ago, and delivered his celebrated call to resistance over the BBC 70 years ago. Yet another event in de Gaulle's illustrious career, 50 years ago, is equally deserving of commemoration, for it helped create the Fifth Republic.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 2673
  • The Dollar and the Dragon

    Joseph S. Nye Series: Of Might and Right
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    2010-07-12
    A "balance of financial terror" has settled over US-China economic relations. China could bring the US to its knees by selling off its massive holdings of dollar-denominated reserves, but it would bring itself to its ankles in the process.... read
    Comments: 4   Recommended: 0   Read: 6457
  • The Market Confidence Bugaboo

    Dani Rodrik Series: Roads to Prosperity
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    2010-07-12
    Governments around the world are now cowering in fear of "market confidence" – that ineffable object of desire that makes officials impement policies they don't really believe in. Indeed, if the current crisis gets worse, it will be political leaders that bear primary responsibility – not because they ignored markets, but because they took them too seriously.... read
    Comments: 3   Recommended: 0   Read: 9533
  • Is Europe Doing Everything Wrong?

    Mario I. Blejer and Eduardo Levy Yeyati Series: European Economies
    2010-07-09
    Reviving the EU's peripheral economies - Greece, Ireland, Portugal, and Spain - requires euro depreciation, closing the inflation differential between the eurozone's periphery and core, and, in some cases, orderly debt restructuring. But EU policymakers have chosen to do precisely the opposite on each front.... read
    Comments: 3   Recommended: 1   Read: 5473
  • How Inequality Fueled the Crisis

    Raghuram Rajan Series: In Search of Dynamism
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    2010-07-09
    Before the recent financial crisis, politicians from both political parties in the US egged on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the giant government-backed mortgage agencies, to support low-income lending in their constituencies. There was a deeper concern behind this newly discovered passion for housing for the poor: growing income inequality.... read
    Comments: 8   Recommended: 1   Read: 25786
  • Is Israel a Normal Country?

    Ian Buruma Series: Crossing Cultures
    2010-07-08
    It is true, as many defenders of Israel claim, that the Jewish state is judged by different standards from other countries. But, while anti-Semitism plays a part in this, it may not be the main reason.... read
    Comments: 4   Recommended: 1   Read: 5905
  • Collaborating with Corruption

    Fron Nahzi Series: Europe at Home and Abroad
    2010-07-08
    Too often, the US, the EU, and the UN choose to look the other way in ethnic Albanian areas of the Balkans, giving free rein to corrupt officials in the vain hope of gaining local support for international efforts to strengthen “regional stability.” But this policy has yielded little stability, while keeping Kosovo, Albania, and Macedonia on the crumbling edge of the “failed state” abyss. ... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 2208
  • Taming Finance in an Age of Austerity

    Joseph E. Stiglitz Series: Unconventional Economic Wisdom
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    2010-07-08
    Finance is supposed to serve the interests of the rest of society, not the other way around. Having gotten the world into its current economic mess, financial markets are now dictating fiscal austerity to countries that have no choice but to go along - and then betting against these countries when they do.... read
    Comments: 5   Recommended: 3   Read: 10403
  • Europe’s Banks, Europe’s crisis

    Daniel Gros Series: Euronomics
    2010-07-07
    Europe’s policy makers have let themselves been misled by politically convenient views of the crisis, first believing that all problems came from the US, and now blaming reckless fiscal policy by the eurozone's southern members. But the real problem is the EU's weakly capitalized banks, which are so interconnected that problems in one country quickly jeopardize the entire system. ... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 0   Read: 4792
  • Central Banking Deflowered

    Harold James Series: Capitalism Then and Now
    2010-07-07
    After the ECB announced on May 9 that it would buy the government bonds of Mediterranean countries experiencing severe fiscal strains, critics complained that the Bank had “lost its virginity.” But, whether they like it or not, central banks' responsibility has always extended far beyond merely ensuring price stability.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 2733
  • Turkey’s Frontline Foreign Policy

    Shlomo Avineri Series: The World in Words
    2010-07-05
    Turkey claims to be pursuing a “zero conflict” policy that aims to minimize regional tensions and enhance stability. But, thanks to its alliance with Iran and support for Hamas, Turkey now finds itself rushing headlong into a series of conflicts – with Europe, the US, Israel, and moderate Arab regimes.... read
    Comments: 3   Recommended: 0   Read: 5181
  • Expanding Crime and Punishment in Tibet

    Robert Barnett Series: China Stands Up
    2010-07-03
    China has been widely criticized for using exceptionally harsh treatment of almost any form of political dissent in Tibet to maintain control over the region. But two recent events in Tibet, involving the trials of two leading Tibetans who had not attacked or criticized the state at all, do not follow this logic.... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 1   Read: 3840
  • Protectionist Myths

    Jagdish Bhagwati Series: The Open Economy and Its Enemies
    2010-07-03
    The pessimism and despair that often overwhelms free traders today is unwarranted. The arguments of protectionists, new and old, are just so many myths that can be successfully challenged.... read
    Comments: 6   Recommended: 1   Read: 7342
  • Is Speculating on Food Dangerous?

    Denis Drechsler, George Rapsomanikis and Alexander Sarris Series: Frontiers of Growth
    2010-07-02
    Some believe that the food-price crisis in 2007-2008 was amplified by speculative trading in commodity futures, which have become an integral part of food markets. But futures markets have evolved in response to market participants’ need to manage price risks, and they are an indispensable marketing tool for many commodities.... read
    Comments: 3   Recommended: 1   Read: 3097
  • Food for Thought on GM Crops

    Per Pinstrup-Andersen Series: Science and Society
    2010-07-02
    The global food crisis of 2007-2008 was a warning of what the future may hold in store if we continue with business as usual, including misplaced opposition to using modern science in food and agriculture. European and developing-country governments must reverse their hostility to GM organisms in order to help ensure food security for all.... read
    Comments: 5   Recommended: 1   Read: 3923
  • Can Good Emerge From the BP Oil Spill?

    Kenneth Rogoff Series: The Unbound Economy
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    2010-07-02
    Perhaps it is a pipe dream, but it is just possible that the ongoing BP oil-spill catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico will finally catalyze support for a US environmental policy with teeth. If so, the starting point should be a renewed push for a carbon tax.... read
    Comments: 3   Recommended: 0   Read: 9796
  • The World Cup and African Women

    Juliet Torome Series: The World in Words
    2010-07-02
    Given male dominance in African politics and soccer, any chance to improve the state of the sport that might arise from the 2010 World Cup will most likely benefit men. Until brought to a level where they can compete in international tournaments beyond Africa, women’s soccer teams on the continent will continue to struggle.... read
    Comments: 3   Recommended: 3   Read: 3542
  • An American Oil Spill

    Anthony D'Agostino and Benjamin K. Sovacool Series: Earth in the Balance
    2010-07-01
    When accidents happen, there is always enough blame to go around, and with the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, no one has been spared – with the exception of a key culprit, the American public. Americans' addiction to cheap gasoline has fueled an obsession with drilling, damming, and digging their way out of problems. ... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 2   Read: 2721
  • Who “Lost” Turkey?

    Joschka Fischer Series: The Rebel Realist
    2010-07-01
    When, after Turkey voted at the UN against new sanctions on Iran, US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates harshly criticized Europeans for having contributed to this estrangement, his undiplomatic frankness caused quite a stir in Paris and Berlin. But Gates hit the nail on the head.... read
    Comments: 8   Recommended: 1   Read: 5773
  • The Nascent Liberian Miracle

    Antoinette M. Sayeh Series: Into Africa
    2010-07-01
    In late 2003, Liberia began to emerge from two decades of brutal military government and civil war that had stripped the country bare and generated massive foreign debts. Now, Liberia has reached a historic milestone: a comprehensive debt-reduction package that opens up new opportunities to rebuild the country.... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 0   Read: 2092
  • Asia’s Dueling Duopoly

    Heizo Takenaka Series: The Asian Century
    2010-07-01
    In today’s Asia, there are two economic powers of global standing, Japan and China. But the balance of economic power between the two is changing, and fast: sometime this year, China’s GDP will exceed that of Japan, and its economic footprint will continue to spread rapidly across Asia and the rest of the world.... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 2   Read: 3401