The global financial system is like a giant swimming pool and turbulent waters are tossing around the swimmers. Moreover, undercurrents that have been keeping the U.S. dollar stronger for longer are likely to be disrupted as relative growth expectations.
A Venezuela free of the influences of the Russian autocracy and the Cuban dictatorship is an objective that the world’s democracies should support.
U.S. President Donald Trump has suggested that the United States can devastate Turkey economically. Is he right?
There are big questions up for debate about the purpose in U.S. foreign policy and the sentiment is not for more of the same.
Right now, everything is up for debate when it comes to the basic purpose of U.S. foreign policy.
Does the United States need to make big changes to its foreign policy in order to make middle class Americans economically better off? Looking at Ohio as a case study, Carnegie brought together a bipartisan group of former policymakers along with researchers from The Ohio State University to find out.
Policymakers need to explore ways to make U.S. foreign policy work better for America’s middle class, even if their economic fortunes depend largely on domestic factors and policies.
As Washington waits to see what Beijing has to offer and Beijing waits to see what Washington wants, a prolonged stalemate is a more likely outcome.
When the new Congress is sworn in on January 3, 2019, President Trump will, for the first time, be confronted with an enabled political opposition with powerful tools.
While Democrats are rightly focused on health care and pocketbook issues, they should also assert themselves on national security.