Ashoka Mody
Misreading the Global Economy
PRINCETON – In April 2010, the International Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook offered an optimistic assessment of the global economy, …
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PRINCETON – In April 2010, the International Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook offered an optimistic assessment of the global economy, …
SHANGHAI – When you think about centers of technological innovation, Silicon Valley, Seattle, and Seoul are probably the first places that c…
NEW YORK – Never in the history of written communication could 140 characters have the impact that they can have now. Two weeks ago, after g…
BEIJING – It is indisputable that China is over-issuing currency. But the reasons behind China’s massive liquidity growth – and the most eff…
BRUSSELS/MEXICO CITY – Since the global economic downturn began in 2008, debate has centered on the macroeconomic strategies and instruments…
WASHINGTON, DC – One thing that experts know, and that non-experts do not, is that they know less than non-experts think they do. This much …
BUENOS AIRES – The global financial crisis has raised fundamental questions regarding central banks’ mandates. Over the past few decades, mo…
WASHINGTON, DC – For three decades, financial globalization had seemed inevitable. New information technologies made it possible to conduct …
FRANKFURT – A crise do euro já transformou a União Europeia, de uma associação voluntária de estados iguais para uma relação entre credores …
Ten years ago, rich countries dominated the world economy, accounting for two-thirds of global GDP. Since then, their share has fallen to just over half. In ten years, it could decline to a mere 40%, with emerging markets producing most global output.
The pace of this shift in economic power is unprecedented, and raises as many questions as it does hopes. What will happen after globalization and (often) good policies have enabled virtually all developing countries to catch up with their richer peers? And how will incumbent powers respond to the new players that economic convergence is bringing to the fore – and to their demands for a greater say in global economic governance?
At the same time, while the path of productivity growth is shaping the nature of today’s new global economy, its key drivers, innovation and trade, are under threat. Cash-rich but gun-shy Western companies are skimping on research and development; emerging economies are rethinking their reliance on export-led growth; and rich and poor governments alike are tempted to intervene to shape the future.
In this environment, readers need to understand the ideas that are shaping – or deforming – the world economy. In Project Syndicate’s weekly series The New Global Economy, readers will be taken to the heart of the matter by those who know their subjects best. The roster of past Project Syndicate’s economic commentators, many of whom (and others like them) will contribute commentaries in the future, includes:
· senior officials, such as World Bank President Robert Zoellick, former Japanese Economy Minister Heizo Takenaka, Russian Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble, and former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown;
· business leaders and financiers, such as Deutsche Bank Chairman Josef Ackermann, Mexican telecoms tycoon Carlos Slim, Barclay’s Capital Chairman Hans-Joerg Rudloff, and financier George Soros;
· economists, such as former European Central Bank Chief Economist Otmar Issing, Nobel laureate Edmund S. Phelps, and Jim O’Neill, Chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management.
Show moreProject Syndicate produces video interviews with regular and featured authors, conducted by the editors of Project Syndicate. In these lively interviews, Project Syndicate contributors expand upon their ideas and analyses, and on the events and trends that their commentaries address. These pithy, compelling discussions are the perfect way to enhance the impact of commentaries that you receive from Project Syndicate.
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