July 9th 2021 Comment Joe Biden’s Nixon Strategy If the West wants Russia to distance itself from China, it will have to accept Putin as he is – warts and all. A column by Melvyn B. Krauss.
July 7th 2021 Comment Is the Fed Getting Burned Again? Inflation is picking up, and the Fed is once again claiming that it is not responsible for that development. But It is not too late to learn from past mistakes. A column by John B. Taylor.
July 1st 2021 Comment A Curse Worse than Cash The longer it takes for regulators to act, the harder it will be to get private digital coins under control. A column by Kenneth Rogoff.
June 30th 2021 Comment America’s Muddled Industrial Policy Governments have a poor track record of identifying «winners» – be it a company or a category of technology. A column by Anne O. Krueger.
June 29th 2021 Comment The Upside of Population Decline Average fertility rates tend to sink below replacement level in all developed countries, and, over time, gradually falling populations. The sooner that is true worldwide, the better for everyone. A column by Adair Turner.
June 28th 2021 Comment Crunch time for central banks The combination of highly expansionary fiscal policies and scarring effects could well lead to inflation rates not seen for decades. A column by Charles Wyplosz.
June 25th 2021 Comment Beware America’s Soaring Public Debt President Joe Biden’s spending plans might create huge deficits that persist long after the economy is back to full employment. A column by Michael J. Boskin.
June 23rd 2021 Comment Biden’s Antitrust Revolutionaries The debate is one between centrist or center-left technocrats who consider more enforcement resources and higher merger standards sufficient, and New Brandeisians who seek much more. A column by Eric Posner.
June 21st 2021 Comment The Stimulus Didn’t Work, Again Washington's additional «stimulus» had little to no impact on consumption and the overall economy. A column by John B. Taylor.
June 17th 2021 Comment Does NATO Have an Arms-Control Brain? NATO needs to put arms control at the heart of the new Strategic Concept that it plans to launch next year. A column by Adam Thomson
June 16th 2021 Comment The Party Is Not Forever China’s ruling Communist Party of China will celebrate its centennial on July 1, but its future might prove to be much rather shortlived. A column by Minxin Pei.
June 14th 2021 Comment The Great Lockdown and Global Trade Global supply chains have weathered the pandemic intact, and the deep recession has not unleashed a wave of protectionism. That is good for global trade, and probably for FDI, too. A column by Daniel Gros.