Mar 29th 2018 Comment China as Seen from a Glass House No one knows how long Xi will remain in office. If China stays the course, the succession question is inconsequential. If China slips, the verdict will be very different. A column by Stephen S. Roach.
Mar 27th 2018 Comment The EU Should Not Retaliate Against US Protectionism The EU-Commission should pursue a de-escalation strategy, offering to reduce tariffs on US imports and to resume negotiations on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership. A column by Hans-Werner Sinn.
Mar 26th 2018 Comment Italian Elections: Why Markets Keep Calm The stalemate is just a palliative. The election shows that Italians are in no mood to bid for a recovery, something that must worry the European Union. A column by Fabrizio Zilibotti.
Mar 21st 2018 Comment The Next Phase of Finance We need to reassert control over the financial sector, to ensure that it is serving the economy, not vice versa, by advancing a set of goals upon which the world agrees. A column by Bertrand Badré.
Mar 19th 2018 Comment Economists vs. Scientists on Long-Term Growth Neither policymakers nor markets should be betting on the slow growth of the past decade carrying over to the next. But that might not be entirely welcome news. A column by Kenneth Rogoff.
Mar 19th 2018 Comment The Real Reason for Trump’s Steel and Aluminum Tariffs US negotiators will use the threat of imposing the tariffs on Chinese producers as a way to persuade China’s government to abandon the policy of «voluntary» technology transfers. A column by Martin Feldstein.
Mar 16th 2018 Comment Europe’s Bretton Woods Moment The original Bretton Woods architecture tried to link economic and political interests with security interests. The EU should revive this now. A column by Harold James.
Mar 14th 2018 Comment Missing the Forest for the Xi Growth in Chinese private consumption as a share of GDP or changes to the hukou system will tell us more than comments about the ambition of Xi Jinping. A column by Jim O’Neill.
Mar 14th 2018 International Selection «We want to be the best, not the biggest» Tidjane Thiam, CEO of Credit Suisse wants to further strengthen its capital and reduce risks as he explains in an exclusive interview.
Mar 8th 2018 Comment Will More Italians Vote With Their Feet? For too long, Italy has ignored its brain drain. Paradoxically, the current stalemate provides an excellent opportunity to address it. A column by Edoardo Campanella.
Mar 7th 2018 Comment The Brexit Endgame The Northern Ireland problem together with the EU’s negotiating leverage mean that the outcome must be a customs union. A column by Barry Eichengreen.
Mar 5th 2018 International Selection «It sure feels like 1987» Jeffrey Sherman, Deputy Chief Investment Officer at DoubleLine Capital, expects more upward pressure on bond yields and draws parallels to the year of the monster crash on Wall Street.