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International Economy, The
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Articles in Fall 2004 issue of International Economy, The
- Why the Redskinsand the Red Soxmatter
by Edward M. Graham
- Lemons into lemonade: how the United States turned an ugly accounting scandal into a mighty lever for global financial oversight and regulation
by Klaus C. Engelen
- The cause of globalization
by Alfred H. Kingon
- Thinking the unthinkable: combining the IMF and World Bank?
by Fritz Fischer
- Can the Earth support Chinese growth? The coming boom-bust cycle
by Tadashi Nakamae
- Germany's psychosis of defeat: a long-time admirer tells how Germany, like the United States in the 1970s, faces a profound crisis of confidence
by Richard W. Fisher
- The emerging global dollar zone? A fleeting coincidence of events or a powerful new underlying force?
by Criton M. Zoakos
- Just say no: regarding Turkey's bid for EU membership, think "neighbor" instead of "family."
by Paul J.J. Welfens
- China's secret ambition: to compete with America in America
by K. Philippa Malmgren
- Europe's no basket case
by Philippe Legrain
- China and the financing of American debt: watch the all-important commodity-producing nations
by David Hale
- Why oil could go to $60: as the world teeters on the precipice of another crisis, it's time for a contingency plan
by Philip K. Verleger, Jr.
- The coming private pension plan crisis: the unavoidable consequences of dollar manipulations and widening U.S. trade deficits
by Roger M. Kubarych
- Corporate debt rejection: the real reason global interest rates are so low
by Richard C. Koo
- Make way for the mighty G20
- Big bad dreams: once again, TIE asked Washington's master catastrophist to lay out his most worrisome disaster scenarios. Here are the results
by Michael Ledeen
- America's financial mess: it's time to eliminate the U.S. saving deficiency
by Ronald I. McKinnon
- If Wal-Mart were a country
- Misplaced fears: why the outsourcing scare is overblown
by Milton Ezrati
- Why democrats can sleep at night
- A Fed retrospective: Al Broaddus, until recently Chairman of the Richmond Federal Reserve Bank, tackles the bond market, inflation targeting, and Chinese capital flows. A TIE exclusive interview
- Managing risk: a skeptic's view of Basel II
by Christopher Whalen
- Merry Christmas, Mr. President
- Who should be the next Fed Chairman?