Nov 27th 2020 Comment America Must Mend Many Fences on Trade Reversing the policy mistakes committed by the Trump administration will be necessary to restore US leadership in the global economy. A column by Anne O. Krueger.
Nov 25th 2020 Comment Coronavirus, School Closures, and Future Inequality The health crisis will leave a mark on future generations and might lead to more inequality and less social mobility. This calls for government support in the field of public education. A column by Fabrizio Zilibotti.
Nov 17th 2020 Comment The Calm Before the Exchange-Rate Storm? In the short to medium term, the dollar certainly could rise more, but it’s worth remembering that economic traumas such as we are now experiencing often prove to be turning points. A column by Kenneth Rogoff.
Nov 13th 2020 Comment A Contested Election and an Uncertain Future President Biden can help make the world a safer and more prosperous place given four years, but that’s different from saying that he can quickly end the recession and the pandemic. A column by Barry Eichengreen.
Nov 10th 2020 Comment Critical Minerals and the New Geopolitics The US, the EU, and Japan must finally produce effective strategies to free themselves from China’s resource grip. A column by Sophia Kalantzakos.
Nov 10th 2020 Comment The Key to the Productivity Puzzle The improvements needed to raise an entire economy’s productivity require coordinated, collective action. But this is difficult to achieve. A column by Diane Coyle.
Nov 6th 2020 Comment The Arctic Comes in from the Cold Shipping routes have opened up and as a consequence great-power competition is increasing in the Arctic. A column by Carl Bildt.
Nov 5th 2020 Comment China Leads Again A double-dip recession – that is what has happened in the aftermath of eight of the last eleven US recessions. The contrast with China’s self-sustaining recovery couldn’t be more striking. A column by Stephen S. Roach.
Nov 2nd 2020 Comment Trump’s Election Gift to China? The prospect of an America paralyzed by a crisis of political illegitimacy at home, and estranged from its allies abroad, might be attractive to the Chinese Communists. A column by Minxin Pei.
Oct 30th 2020 Comment What the US Election Is Really About So many Americans have invested themselves fully in opposing the unelected bureaucrats of the «deep state» that Trumpism could live on without its namesake. A column by Eric Posner.
Oct 29th 2020 Comment Inequality and Its Discontents While some on the left and libertarian right push for a universal basic income, it would be far better simply to subsidize low wages for those able to work. A column by Michael J. Boskin.
Oct 19th 2020 Comment The Stock-Market Disconnect Until lofty stock-market valuations are underpinned by a broad-based recovery in health and economic outcomes, investors should not get too comfortable with their pandemic profits. A column by Kenneth Rogoff.