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Daniel H. Rosen Daniel Rosen is a visiting fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, where he was in residence from 1993 to 1998. He is also principal of Rhodium Group (RHG), a New York–based research firm, and has been an adjunct professor at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs since 2001. From 2000 to 2001 he served as senior adviser for international economic policy on the White House National Economic Council and director at the National Security Council. His work focuses on the economic development of Asia, particularly China. Other areas of research include energy, agriculture and commodities, trade and environment linkages, and economic transitions and competitiveness. He is the author of Behind the Open Door: Foreign Enterprises in the Chinese Marketplace (1998) and coauthor of China's Energy Evolution: The Consequences of Powering Growth at Home and Abroad (forthcoming 2008, with Trevor Houser), Prospects for a US-Taiwan Free Trade Agreement (2004, with Nicholas Lardy), Roots of Competitiveness: China's Evolving Agriculture Interests (2004, with Scott Rozelle and Jikun Huang), and APEC and the New Economy (2002, with Catherine L. Mann). His first book on the intersection of China's energy sector and environment was Powering China, written with Dan Esty in 1995 for the Rockefeller Brothers Foundation. |