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Cykl ”BizAutorytety”

”BizAutorytety” to seria komentarzy i analiz najbardziej wpływowych postaci światowej ekonomii. Także prominentnych autorów z Chin i Indii - których nazwiska lepiej poznać już teraz. Najciekawsze artykuły tłumaczymy w całości lub streszczamy. ”BizAutorytety” powstają we współpracy z syndykatem autorów ”Project Syndicate”, który dostarcza artykułów m.in. ”Washington Post”, ”Le Figaro”, ”Handelsblatt”, ”Die Welt”, ”Il Sole 24 Ore”, ”El Pais”, ”China Daily”. W Polsce te publikacje znajdziesz wyłącznie na Wyborcza.biz w cyklu ”BizAutorytety”

  • Zhang Monan: China's Hidden Debt Risk

    BEIJING - In the last 200 years, there have been more than 250 cases of sovereign-debt default, and 68 cases of domestic-debt default. None of these was an isolated incident. Indeed, such defaults - combined with factors like large current-account or fiscal deficits, overvalued currencies, high...

  • Robert Shiller: Debt-Friendly Stimulus

    NEW HAVEN - With much of the global economy apparently trapped in a long and painful austerity-induced slump, it is time to admit that the trap is entirely of our own making. We have constructed it from unfortunate habits of thought about how to handle spiraling public debt.

  • Robert Skidelsky: The Chávez Way

    LONDON - I remember the exact date of my visit to Venezuela. I was sunbathing by the pool on the roof of the Caracas Hilton. A waiter came up to me and mumbled something about a bomb attack in New York. I rushed to my room and saw the news footage, endlessly replayed, of two airplanes crashing into...

  • Michael Spence: Europe, Italian-Style

    MILAN - Last summer, after two years of growing uncertainty, systemic risk in the eurozone finally began to wane, as conditional commitments came together. Italy and Spain offered credible fiscal and growth-oriented reforms, and the European Central Bank, with Germany's backing, promised...

  • Roberto Guareschi: Pope Francis the Politician

    BUENOS AIRES - Jorge Mario Bergoglio - not an Italian, not a European, but a Latin American from Argentina - has now been chosen as the supreme pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church. What, if anything, can Latin America expect from Pope Francis I?

  • Barry Eichengreen: Europe's Lost-and-Found Decade

    BRUSSELS - Sentiment in European financial markets has turned. For the moment, the possibility of a Greek exit from the eurozone is off the table. If interest-rate spreads on Spanish and Italian government bonds are any guide, bondholders are no longer betting on a eurozone breakup. European stocks...

  • Roberto Guareschi:Pope Francis the Politician

    BUENOS AIRES - Jorge Mario Bergoglio - not an Italian, not a European, but a Latin American from Argentina - has now been chosen as the supreme pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church. What, if anything, can Latin America expect from Pope Francis I?

  • Andrés Velasco: A Tale of Two Countries

    SANTIAGO - Barely two years ago, Brazil's rapid economic growth and expanding middle class made it the darling of financial markets, whereas Mexico was better known for drug gangs and violence. With slow growth and stalled economic reforms, financial markets were about to write off Mexico as a lost...

  • Otaviano Canuto: Currency War and Peace

    WASHINGTON, DC - Much of the hype surrounding last month's meeting in Moscow of G-20 finance ministers and central bankers was dedicated to so-called "currency wars," which some developing-country officials have accused advanced countries of waging by pursuing unconventional monetary policies. But...

  • Dani Rodrik: National Governments, Global Citizens

    CAMBRIDGE - Nothing endangers globalization more than the yawning governance gap - the dangerous disparity between the national scope of political accountability and the global nature of markets for goods, capital, and many services - that has opened up in recent decades. When markets transcend...

  • Roberto Laserna: Earth to Evo Morales

    LA PAZ - "Mother Earth is not for sale," the Bolivian representative told last year's United Nations climate-change conference in Doha. But environmental policy in Bolivia itself undermines the government's efforts to assert moral superiority over other countries.

  • Sin-ming Shaw: Hong Kong's Hollow Leadership

    HONG KONG - Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying has been dogged by scandal from his first days in office, and his personal integrity is routinely impugned by much of the public. So it is no surprise that his popularity is plummeting.

  • Mohamed A. El-Erian: Transatlantic Trade's Transformative Potential

    NEWPORT BEACH - After instant and seemingly coordinated fanfare in Europe and the United States, the proposal for a European Union-US free-trade area has been generating little media attention. There are three reasons for this, and all three highlight broader constraints on good national economic...

  • Kenneth Rogoff: Mexico Breaking Good?

    MEXICO CITY - For a glimpse of the average American's understanding of the relationship between the United States and Mexico, one only has to watch the critically acclaimed television series Breaking Bad. Set in Albuquerque, New Mexico, a few hundred miles from the border, the series chronicles the...

  • Sylvester Eijffinger, Edin Mujagic: Independence Lost

    TILBURG - Every major economic crisis has its victims. Some bounce back, while others experience long-lasting, even permanent, damage.