The ongoing geopolitical tensions, US President Donald Trump’s tariff policies, and growing protectionism are seen as some of the factors paving the way for plurilateral trade agreements. How does ...
In a wide-ranging interview with CDE’s Ann Bernstein, economist Tyler Cowen discusses his views on global economic ...
From trade to migration to personal freedom, the conservatives of the global New Right hold a philosophy incompatible with ...
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U.S. imports from China have shrunk drastically. But billions of dollars of the change appear to be the result of accounting ...
Europe's digital trade policies unfairly target American tech giants like Apple, Google and Meta, and a Section 301 ...
As global markets retreat into protectionism and nationalist economic agendas, Africa must hold firm to its integration ...
The first is the loss of predictability. Tit-for-tat tariffs erode planning certainty. Investment slows, partnerships become ...
U.S. home builders and car manufacturers are taking a hit. Tariffs haven’t slashed the federal debt as promised.
Food security is national security. A nation that weakens its farmers while foreign adversaries threaten global supply lines ...
What is conservatism?” asked President Abraham Lincoln. “Is it not adherence to the old and the tried, against the new and the untried?” Defining conservatism is not an easy task.
That distinction is easy to miss in Washington, where analysts often assume that geopolitical competition works like a running scoreboard: if the United States loses, China must win, and vice versa.