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Had European policymakers not been overly complacent over the past decade, they might have learned a lot from Latin America's sad past experience with misguided macroeconomic policies, especially under fixed exchange rate regimes. This might have helped them to avoid their present sovereign debt crisis. Now that they are neck-deep in the mess, it is too late for those lessons.
Roger Noriega comments on how the crisis in Honduras has affected the United States' role in Latin America.
Latin America should expect a kinder and a gentlerInternational Monetary Fundunder DominiqueStrauss-Kahn's leadership.
Alberto Fujimori accomplished much, but tarnished his legacy by serving himself.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn will face two significant challenges when he becomes managing director of the IMF in October.
Please join us for a timely panel discussion on the state of freedom of expression in the Americas.
The Cuban people need--and deserve--profound change, including political liberty and economic opportunity, even as Fidel and Raúl Castro favor a transition from one dictator to another that preserves the vestiges of the Cuban police state and the nation’s decrepit socialism. Yet much of the world is eager to support a...
The importance of the U.S.-Chile Free Trade Agreement (FTA), enacted on January 1, 2004, is often overshadowed by both the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Central America–United States–Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR). Nevertheless, the U.S.-Chile FTA offers valuable lessons about the impact of bilateral trade agreements...





