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RealTime Economic Issues Watch

A website forum in which senior fellows of the Peterson Institute for International Economics discuss and debate their responses to global economic and financial developments as they occur each day and offer insights that others might overlook.

Archive: Posts Tagged ‘Asia’

How Quickly Will China Move?

by C. Fred Bergsten | April 16th, 2010 | 04:28 pm

If China does let its currency start rising again, as widely speculated, the overriding issue is whether it will move quickly and substantially enough. The renminbi is undervalued by about 25 percent on a trade-weighted average basis and by about 40 percent against the dollar. No one expects China to curtail [...]

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Is China Using Its Checkbook to Lock up Natural Resources Around the World?

by Theodore H. Moran | January 13th, 2010 | 11:54 am

Backed by the Chinese government, Chinese companies have been acquiring equity stakes in natural resource companies, extending loans to mining and petroleum investors, and writing long-term procurement contracts for oil and minerals. These activities have aroused concern that China might be locking up natural resource supplies, gaining preferential access to [...]

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Controlling Emissions in the Developing World: A Dissenting View

by Meera Fickling | December 11th, 2009 | 03:33 pm

In a recent op-ed in the Financial Times, Nancy Birdsall and Arvind Subramanianasserted that rich countries were unfairly blaming the developing world for contributing to global warming, and they called for a shift away from focusing on emissions and toward exploiting “the latest available clean technologies” for poor countries. [...]

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Obama Should Give a Qualified Endorsement to Asian Regionalism

by C. Randall Henning | November 6th, 2009 | 05:11 pm

President Obama’s trip to East Asia over the next two weeks comes at an important time in Asian regionalism. East Asian governments have been moving on several fronts toward regional cooperation and, while some skepticism might be justified, the rest of the world would be wrong to dismiss these developments as [...]

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Tires, Globalization, China, and the WTO

by Arvind Subramanian | September 14th, 2009 | 05:21 pm

The decision by the United States to slap a 35 percent tariff on tire imports from China is, of course, significant. It follows a decision last week by the US Department of Commerce to impose countervailing duties on imports of steel pipe from Chinese firms. In the world of the 24/7 [...]

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