Program
Global Order and Institutions
Reimagining Global Economic Governance

While neoliberal economic orthodoxy has generated great wealth, it has also increased inequality, hollowed out community, and despoiled the environment. Our team fosters North-South dialogue on reimagined rules and institutions of global economic governance capable of delivering equitable, inclusive, and sustainable growth and providing global public goods.

Working Group on Reimagining Global Economic Governance

May 2023 Concept Document

The purpose of this initiative is to engage thought leaders from all regions in a candid, ongoing conversation on the institutions that should govern the international political economy in an era defined by two powerful if somewhat contradictory impulses. The first is a growing determination by many states and publics to pull back from—and regain control over—globalization, to better advance their domestically defined preferences, ranging from industrial policies to national security goals, social welfare aims, and ecological objectives (among others). The second is a swelling call to update existing or create entirely new multilateral frameworks to increase the voice and weight of developing nations and to better address development needs and unprecedented cross-border challenges like climate change, pandemic disease, and financial instability, including through the provision of global public goods.

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article
Ordering Principles for Reviving Global Economic Governance

Climate policy must go beyond purely economic targets. Effective policymaking must also mobilize societies because success depends on their solidarity and agency.

  • Dennis Snower
· July 17, 2024
article
Global Economic Governance: What’s “Growth” Got to Do with It?

An obsession with growth has generated massive inequality, undermined global economic stability, and weakened faith in democracy. Reversing these trends requires reining in the power of financial capital and managing global trade flows.

  • Ann Pettifor
· July 17, 2024
article
Moving Beyond Neoliberalism? Historical Reflections on Regime Changes in Global Economic Governance

Faith in hyper-globalization has collapsed, but what new narrative and institutions will succeed it? A look at the past provides hints of what is to come.

  • Hagen Schulz-Forberg
· July 17, 2024
commentary
The World Bank Eyes an Overhaul Amid the Climate Crisis

Development and climate action must be pursued in tandem.

· October 26, 2023
commentary
The Massive Challenge Facing Leaders at the UN Development Summit

Can multilateral institutions such as the World Bank adapt to new realities and systemic shocks that have thrown development in reverse?

· September 12, 2023
article
Global Economic Turmoil Calls for a Modernized Global Financial Architecture to Address Needs of the Most Vulnerable Countries

Unfortunately, those Western governments with decisionmaking power and resources to help vulnerable countries respond to the polycrisis are not inclined to use it, given domestic cost-of-living crises in G7 countries, the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, and limited domestic political appetite for international initiatives.

· November 15, 2022
paper
How Inequality and Polarization Interact: America’s Challenges Through a South African Lens

Both South Africa and the United States wrestle with severe inequality, polarization, and the corrosion of democratic institutions. South Africa’s experiences provide important lessons for the United States’ own governance challenges.

  • Brian Levy
· April 27, 2022
research
Rewiring Globalization

Dissatisfaction with globalization has turned into a powerful force, with unchecked globalism increasingly seen as a threat to the integrity of democratic rule. Policymakers must reframe globalization to mitigate its negative consequences while keeping its core growth-enhancing dynamics intact.

· February 17, 2022
In the Media
Global Capital Is the Tail That Wags the U.S. Economic Dog

Although Wall Street would be ferociously opposed to policies that limit the unfettered flow of capital around the world, the right polices could sharply reduce the economic disruption wreaked on workers, producers, farmers, and the middle class.

· September 29, 2020
Foreign Policy
report
Making U.S. Foreign Policy Work Better for the Middle Class

To help expand and sustain America’s middle class, U.S. foreign policy makers need a new agenda that will rebuild trust at home and abroad.

  • +8
· September 23, 2020