Skip to main content

Dante Alighieri Disparte

Dante Alighieri Disparte

7 commentaries

Dante Alighieri Disparte is Chief Strategy Officer and Head of Global Policy at Circle.

Sort by: Show:
  1. America Must Lead on Crypto Regulation
    disparte5_ Kevin DietschGetty Images_FSOC Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

    America Must Lead on Crypto Regulation

    Mar 28, 2024 Dante Alighieri Disparte urges policymakers to take decisive action and set new rules for the industry in 2024.

  2. Digital Assets and American Power
    disparte4_Getty Images_crypto Getty Images

    Digital Assets and American Power

    Apr 19, 2023 Dante Alighieri Disparte urges US policymakers to recognize the nascent sector’s long-term strategic importance.

  3. What’s Next for Fintech?
    whatley15_Getty Images Sadik Demiroz/Getty Images

    What’s Next for Fintech?

    Mar 13, 2023 Johanna M. Costigan, et al. consider what recent developments will mean for the future of technological innovation in financial services.

  4. Yes, Crypto Still Matters
    disparte3_lerbankGetty Images_blockchain lerbank/Getty Images

    Yes, Crypto Still Matters

    Jul 7, 2022 Dante Alighieri Disparte thinks blockchain technology is poised for mainstream adoption by both new and incumbent players.

  5. The Biden Administration Gets Serious About Web3
    disparte2_Getty Images_us crypto biden Getty Images

    The Biden Administration Gets Serious About Web3

    Mar 18, 2022 Dante Alighieri Disparte sees a sweeping executive order on digital assets as a major step forward for US technological leadership.

  1. frankel165_CHRISTINE OLSSONTTTT NEWS AGENCYAFP via Getty Images_nobelwinners Christine Olsson/News Agency/AFP via Getty Images

    What Causes Prosperity?

    Jeffrey Frankel shows how this year's Nobel Prize-winning economists tackled a once-insoluble problem.
  2. ignatieff7_nocopyright

    Ukraine’s Post-Colonial Future

    Michael Ignatieff believes that what is at stake in the war with Russia is the fate of the last European imperialism.
  3. obstfeld6_Anthony KwanGetty Images_tariffs Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

    Donald Trump’s Tariffs Would Hurt US Workers and Businesses

    Maurice Obstfeld shows why targeting an overall reduction in imports would reduce America’s real wages and national income.
  4. kenewendo6_ LUIS TATOAFP via Getty Images_green energy africa LUIS TATO/AFP via Getty Images

    Africa’s Green Future Starts with Debt Relief

    Bogolo Kenewendo & Patrick Njoroge propose large-scale relief to ensure that the continent’s countries can invest in climate action.
  5. james159_getty images-inflation Getty Images

    Diane Coyle on economic progress, tech monopolies, artificial intelligence, and more

    Diane Coyle advocates a new public philosophy that rejects viewing “government” and “market” as opposites, explains why time-use data must shape technological development, warns that policymakers are devising AI regulation in a thick conceptual fog, and more.
  6. banga4_PATRICK FORTAFP via Getty Images_rainforest PATRICK FORT/AFP via Getty Images)

    A New Paradigm for Standing Forests

    Ajay Banga, et al.

    While forest carbon markets have created new revenue streams, they usually reward only those countries, communities, or project developers who are focused on reducing their emissions from deforestation. Something more is needed to tie financial rewards to forests that aren’t under immediate threat.

    present a new mechanism to generate financial returns for countries that prevent deforestation.
  7. woods59_ Brandon BellGetty Images_labor Brandon Bell/Getty Images

    Working-Class Antiheroes

    Ngaire Woods advocates using domestic labor legislation that supports unionization – not tariffs – to protect workers.
  8. op_brown2_TIERNEY CROSSAFP via Getty Images_IMFworldbank Tierney Cross/AFP via Getty Images

    Toward a Fifth World Order

    Gordon Brown & Mohamed A. El-Erian

    Historically, massive revisions to the international system have come about only after a complete breakdown of the previous order. With today's global institutions sorely in need of reform, can the transition to a new order be achieved without incurring the costs and pain that such a breakdown would entail?

    explain why multilateral institutions urgently need to be reformed, and why the G20 is the right forum for it.
  9. kruger76_Justin SullivanGetty Images_shipping Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    US Tariffs Will Not Bring Back Jobs from China

    Michael R. Strain decries both parties’ reluctance to prepare Americans for the employment opportunities of today and tomorrow.

Edit Newsletter Preferences

Set up Notification

To receive email updates regarding this {entity_type}, please enter your email below.

If you are not already registered, this will create a PS account for you. You should receive an activation email shortly.