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Search Result for “Government debt”

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OPINION

How elections bring about a cycle of devaluation

Oped, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 01/05/2024

» The proposition that major currency devaluations are more likely to come immediately after, rather than before, an election is being tested anew. In the biggest voting year in history, the implications could be far-reaching.

OPINION

El Salvador's Bitcoin bet is a dangerous folly

News, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 30/09/2021

» El Salvador this month became the first country to adopt a cryptocurrency -- in this case, Bitcoin -- as legal tender. I say the first, because others might follow. But they should think twice, because the idea is highly dubious -- and likely to be economically dangerous for developing countries in particular.

OPINION

The G20's coronavirus agenda

Oped, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 27/08/2021

» Finance ministers, central bank governors, and political leaders are hard at work preparing for the 2021 G20 Heads of State and Government Summit in Rome on Oct 30-31. With the Covid-19 pandemic stretching well into its second year, the meeting will come at a time of heightened uncertainty about public health and the global economy. And though the mechanisms of international cooperation have been weakened by the pandemic and remain bruised by former US President Donald Trump's legacy, they are more important than ever.

OPINION

The connection between Covid-19 and climate

Oped, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 02/10/2020

» From early on in the Covid-19 pandemic, a common refrain has been, "At least maybe now we will get serious about addressing climate change." One can certainly see the logic behind this thinking. The terrible toll the pandemic has taken should remind us of the importance of three things that are also necessary to tackle global warming: science, public policy, and international cooperation.

BUSINESS

The case against subsidising housing debt

Business, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 31/05/2017

» At the end of the first quarter, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, consumer debt in the United States for the first time exceeded its previous peak (in dollars), reached in the third quarter of 2008, just as the global financial crisis erupted. Although car loans and student debt have been rising especially rapidly, housing debt remains more than two-thirds of the $12.7-trillion total.

BUSINESS

China's Stock-Market Red Herring 

Business, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 01/02/2016

» With the Shanghai composite index down more than 40% since last June, investors worldwide are watching the decline with growing concern -- but not because they are invested in the plummeting market (China stocks are overwhelmingly held by Chinese). Rather, the fear is that plunging equity prices mean that China's economy is going down the tubes.