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Begin New Search You searched for: Content Type Policy Brief Remove constraint Content Type: Policy Brief Publishing Institution Peterson Institute for International Economics Remove constraint Publishing Institution: Peterson Institute for International Economics Publication Year within 5 Years Remove constraint Publication Year: within 5 Years Publication Year within 25 Years Remove constraint Publication Year: within 25 Years

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1. Why the proposed Brussels buyers club to procure critical minerals is a bad idea

2. Can the World Trade Organization be saved? Should it?

3. The international tax agreement of 2021: Why it’s needed, what it does, and what comes next?

4. Economic sanctions against Russia: How effective? How durable?

5. Multilateral development banks are key to unlocking low-carbon investments in developing economies

6. Will China's impending overhaul of its financial regulatory system make a difference?

7. Have trade agreements been bad for America?

8. Building downstream capacity for critical minerals in Africa: Challenges and opportunities

9. How to save the WTO with more flexible trading rules

10. EU carbon border adjustment mechanism faces many challenges

11. CHIPS Act will spur US production but not foreclose China

12. Soaring demand is driving double-digit import price inflation in the United States

13. Corruption risks loom large over financing of green infrastructure

14. Is South Korea vulnerable to EU and US carbon border restrictions?

15. The online gig economy’s impact is not as big as many thought

16. Bad news for the Fed from the Beveridge space

17. South Korea should prepare for its exposure to US-China technology tensions

18. China's CPTPP bid spurs South Korea to act on Asia-Pacific trade pacts

19. Shift to renewable energy could be a mixed blessing for mineral exporters

20. The European Union renews its offensive against US technology firms

21. The case for a cautiously optimistic outlook for US inflation

22. For inflation relief, the United States should look to trade liberalization

23. Fiscal support and monetary vigilance: Economic policy implications of the Russia-Ukraine war for the European Union

24. Raising a caution flag on US financial sanctions against China

25. Fiscal resiliency in a deeply uncertain world: The role of semiautonomous discretion

26. Uncertain prospects for sovereign wealth funds of Gulf countries

27. Sovereign wealth funds are growing more slowly, and governance issues remain

28. Will industrial and agricultural subsidies ever be reformed?

29. The unappreciated trend toward unilateral trade liberalization

30. Does the new fiscal consensus in advanced economies travel to emerging markets?

31. The evolving gender gap in labor force participation during COVID-19

32. Startups in the United States during the pandemic reflect some dynamism amid job losses

33. Improving China's participation in resolving developing-country debt problems

34. Economic costs and benefits of accelerated COVID-19 vaccinations

35. Overheating debate: Why not in Japan?

36. The pandemic’s long reach: South Korea’s fiscal and fertility outlook

37. RCEP Is Not Enough: South Korea Also Needs to Join the CPTPP

38. Collateral benefits? South Korean exports to the United States and the US-China trade war

39. Another reason to raise the Fed's inflation target: An employment and output boom

40. Climate policy is macroeconomic policy, and the implications will be significant

41. An Uneven Global Rebound Will Challenge Emerging-Market and Developing Economies

42. Digital agreements: What’s covered, what’s possible

43. Can EU carbon border adjustment measures propel WTO climate talks?

44. What US strategy gets wrong about China in Africa

45. Securing macroeconomic and monetary stability with a Federal Reserve–backed digital currency

46. Reviving the potency of monetary policy with recession insurance bonds

47. What might have been: Globalization on the medal stand at the Tokyo Olympics

48. Women scaling the corporate ladder: Progress steady but slow globally

49. A New Policy Toolkit Is Needed as Countries Exit COVID-19 Lockdowns

50. Developing Countries Can Help Restore the WTO's Dispute Settlement System

51. Automatic stabilizers in a low-rate environment

52. A new policy toolkit is needed as countries exit COVID-19 lockdowns

53. When more delivers less: Comparing the US and French COVID-19 crisis responses

54. US unemployment insurance in the pandemic and beyond

55. A possible IMF Pandemic Support Facility for emerging-market countries

56. Lebanon's monetary meltdown tests the limits of central banking

57. Sovereign debt relief in the global pandemic: Lessons from the 1980s

58. Impact of COVID-19 lockdowns on individual mobility and the importance of socioeconomic factors

59. Taming the US trade deficit: A dollar policy for balanced growth

60. Using purchasing power parities to compare countries: Strengths and shortcomings

61. China's Financial Opening Accelerates

62. The WTO's Existential Crisis: How to Salvage Its Ability to Settle Trade Disputes

63. Hyperinflation in Venezuela: A Stabilization Handbook

64. Global E-Commerce Talks Stumble on Data Issues, Privacy, and More

65. The Amazon Is a Carbon Bomb: How Can Brazil and the World Work Together to Avoid Setting It Off?

66. Average Inflation Targeting Would Be a Weak Tool for the Fed to Deal with Recession and Chronic Low Inflation

67. US-China Trade War: Both Countries Lose, World Markets Adjust, Others Gain

68. Are Central Banks Out of Ammunition to Fight a Recession? Not Quite.

69. Keeping Up with the Future: Upgrading Forecasts of Political Instability and Geopolitical Risk

70. China, Like the US, Faces Challenges in Achieving Inclusive Growth Through Manufacturing

71. Chinese Investments in the US and EU Are Declining—for Similar Reasons

72. The Rise of Global Innovation by US Multinationals Poses Risks and Opportunities

73. Iran Has a Slow Motion Banking Crisis

74. Fiscal Policy Options for Japan

75. Efforts of Oil Exporters in the Middle East and North Africa to Diversify Away from Oil Have Fallen Short

76. Survival of the International Monetary Fund and Global Economic Cooperation

77. Opening Internet Monopolies to Competition with Data Sharing Mandates

78. The Return of Economic Nationalism in Germany

79. Keeping Up with the Future: Upgrading Forecasts of Political Instability and Geopolitical Risk

80. China, Like the US, Faces Challenges in Achieving Inclusive Growth Through Manufacturing

81. The Rise of Global Innovation by US Multinationals Poses Risks and Opportunities