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The liberal critics of Republicans want the GOP to behave itself and go back to the good old days best described by Eugene McCarthy’s quip that the chief purpose of moderate Republicans is to shoot the wounded after the battle is over. No thanks.
Jane Perlez's and William Wan's articles in today's papers (the New York Times and Washington Post, respectively) stand as a minor but important milestone in elite understanding of international relations in the 21st century. Though they provide only a summary of a Brookings monograph - the product...
Leading academics and practitioners from the fields of economics, international relations, and law will examine global economic institutions as a whole.
The second event in the AEI series discussing global economic architecture.
The fall meeting of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund held hopes of constructive, multilateral dialogue to defuse the currency wars, but did not provide decisive results.
Online registration for this event is now closed. Walk-in registrations will be accepted.
Development economists like to study success—how to pull a country out of poverty, how to spur growth, how to improve living conditions—but how do they study a country like Zimbabwe, which has undergone a rapid and devastating...
Chinese telecom-equipment maker Huawei has become a global corporate giant, yet security concerns from US officials have kept it from gaining a foothold in America, intensifying US-China tensions. In a time of great economic need, US desire for foreign direct investment from China is clashing with fears over cyber attacks from organizations suspected to be under Beijing’s influence.
A coordinated international response should embrace concrete monetary policy, fiscal policy, and exchange rate policy actions.




