Liberalization of policies related to foreign direct investment accounted for 30 percent of US inward FDI stock growth and 18 percent of US outward FDI stock growth between 1982 and 2006, find Matthew Adler and Gary Clyde Hufbauer. Working Paper 08-7.
News Release: Steven R. Weisman of the New York Times to Join Peterson Institute
The exchange rate of the dollar could play a critical role in both the evolution of the housing and financial crises and the needed policy responses, testifies C. Fred Bergsten. Presidential candidates and Congress should take note that export-led growth—generated by globalization—and its creation of new jobs are cushioning the US slowdown and so far preventing a recession.
William R. Cline and John Williamson present new estimates of fundamental equilibrium exchange rates for leading advanced and emerging-market economies in Policy Brief 08-7 using a model Cline has developed in Working Paper 08-6.
News Release: Key Asian Currencies Still Substantially Undervalued with Respect to Dollar
Morris Goldstein and Nicholas Lardy find the undervaluation of the renminbi has increased in the three years since China adopted its new currency regime.
Hybrid financial institutions do not work, and those in the United States—such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac—should be nationalized, recommends Adam S. Posen.
Peterson Perspectives: Interviews on Current Issues
Michael Mussa argues that the Fund should take a stronger stand on violation of norms for exchange rates in this website
interview.
Jeffrey J. Schott proposes a 5-step plan for Doha Round rehabilitation.
World Trade Organization membership can place Russia on the right economic track, argues Anders Åslund.
Peterson Perspectives: Interviews on Current Issues
The decision by the House of Representatives to change the rules for Congressional action on trade agreements drives a gaping hole in US trade policy and poses the gravest threat to the global trading system in decades, says C. Fred Bergsten in a website
interview. See also Policy Brief 08-5.
Howard Rosen testifies before Congress that the United States needs a comprehensive strategy to address the economic disruptions to American workers and firms that are an inevitable part of globalization. See also event on Trade Adjustment Assistance. America must reform healthcare and education to better protect Americans against job loss, says Jacob Funk Kirkegaard.
As US skill levels fall, policymakers need to reform immigration policies to encourage the inflow of high-skilled workers from abroad, writes Jacob Kirkegaard.
Peterson Perspectives: Interviews on Current Issues
Edwin M. Truman analyzes both the key concerns raised by sovereign wealth funds and the essential measures required to alleviate those concerns in a
website audio interview.
>> Transcript
The potential impacts of sovereign wealth funds on US foreign policy, national security, and economic interests may be disquieting, but they do not endanger the United States. Edwin M. Truman presents a blueprint for sovereign wealth fund best practices.
Putin's unproductive two-term presidency leaves a huge backlog of reforms that can no longer be ignored, writes Anders Åslund.
America's Gains from Globalization
Gary Clyde Hufbauer answers critics who question US gains from globalization.
Paper | Summary
New Book: Challenges of Globalization: Imbalances and Growth
Anders Åslund and Marek Dabrowski
The United States should seek partnership with Beijing to provide joint global economic leadership instead of focusing on narrow bilateral problems, writes C. Fred Bergsten.
New Book: Economic Sanctions Reconsidered, 3rd edition, with CD-ROM
by Gary Clyde Hufbauer, Jeffrey J. Schott, Kimberly Ann Elliott, and Barbara Oegg
>> Release Event | In Brief | Selected Case Studies Online
Jeffrey J. Schott examines the history and future of the world trading system with recommendations for reform.
Peterson Perspectives: Interviews on Current Issues
In a three-part interview, Morris Goldstein analyzes the origins of the subprime credit crisis, the policy responses so far, and suggests his own top ten regulatory reforms needed to respond to the subprime credit crisis. To avoid future financial crises, Goldstein presents a proposal to improve regulatory liquidity.
Peterson Perspectives: Interviews on Current Issues
William R. Cline explains the effect of climate change on agriculture on a country-by-country basis, where the impact will be greatest, and what we need to do to reduce the risks in this
website audio interview.
>> Transcript
Unabated global warming is estimated to reduce world agriculture potential 5 to 15 percent by the 2080s, with the greatest losses falling disproportionately on developing countries, writes William R. Cline. See also Global Warming and Agriculture. Cline agrees with the Stern Review: Aggressive action is necessary to abate global warming.
New Book: Leveling the Carbon Playing Field: International Competition and US Climate Policy Design
>> Event: Book Release | News Release
Peterson Perspectives: Interviews on Current Issues
Marcus Noland reports on the results of a survey of 1,346 North Korean refugees in this website
interview.
North Korea is on the verge of another famine, and the United Nations has only made matters worse, say Stephan Haggard, Marcus Noland, and Erik Weeks. See related news release and event. North Korea's recent nuclear confession is only a first step toward the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.
New Book: Accountability and Oversight of US Exchange Rate Policy by C. Randall Henning
>> News Release
Inflation now plagues many former communist countries with fixed exchange rates; those with floating exchange rates, balanced budgets, and inflation targeting are not, writes Anders Åslund. Inadequate fiscal and monetary policies are exacerbating inflation in India, writes Arvind Subramanian, but inflation targeting is an unnecessary and inappropriate solution to India's current crisis.
The Korea–United States Free Trade Agreement can be ratified this year if both countries resolve problems that threaten to delay the accord, says Jeffrey J. Schott. See also Policy Brief 07-7. Improvements in South Korea's political and economic institutions over the past decade have outstripped the country’s "First World economy, Third World politics" image, say Marcus Noland and Erik Weeks. Working Paper 08-5.
New Book: Debating China's Exchange Rate Policy edited by Morris Goldstein and Nicholas R. Lardy
>> In Brief
To address global imbalances, C. Fred Bergsten calls for an Asian Plaza Agreement.
Global Economic Prospects
Michael Mussa forecasts a slowdown in global growth and a mild US recession in 2008/2009. Morris Goldstein offers his program for financial regulation after the subprime and credit crisis (available as audio). Rising inflation across emerging Asia is leading countries there to restrict exports and liberalize imports of food, says Arvind Subramanian. Audio and video available online.
NAFTA was state of the art when negotiated in the early 1990s; 15 years later, the pact could benefit from renovation, say Gary Clyde Hufbauer and Jeffrey J. Schott. See also NAFTA Revisited.






