The global financial crisis has heightened fears about integration with global markets. For a country like India, an important task of policymaking is to identify the path of this integration.
The U.S. shale gas revolution is having a big effect on European manufacturing. New transatlantic trade talks should focus European minds on energy market reforms.
Beijing has no choice but to take significant steps to restructure its economy. The only question is how to proceed.
The United States will emerge from the financial crisis much sooner than China, even if Chinese growth rates have been or are currently higher than that of the U.S.
China’s President Xi Jinping recently toured the Central Asian republics, offering energy and transportation infrastructure contracts. This continues China’s strong push into a region formerly dominated by Moscow and courted off and on by Washington.
The global spread of virtue and its byproducts trumps in every way the global spread of vice.
The global economy’s slow and painful healing from the financial crisis continues, but three great challenges still confront the global recovery.
The Chinese growth model is not radically new. It is based primarily on the growth model developed by Japan in the twentieth century, and it has been implemented in various forms by many countries.
The Chinese government is dedicated to getting its electric vehicle market off the ground. But nurturing a new, globally competitive industry requires more than political will.
Vice President Joe Biden’s strong record on U.S.-Indian relations raises hopes for his visit to New Delhi.






Stay connected to the Global Think Tank with Carnegie's smartphone app for Android and iOS devices