India and China have both come a long way from 1980 to the present in terms of economic growth as measured by GDP per capita. Yet the path towards economic development has been different for both countries.
This paper gives a brief overview of international financial crises with examples. It then analyzes whether preventive or eliminative measures directed at those crises cause unacceptable damage to the global economy.
The impossible trinity in international finance is a policy trilemma that all governments face when trying to satisfy three objectives of international financial policy: monetary autonomy, exchange rate stability, and free capital mobility.
This paper argues that the future of global value chains is not going to be characterized by a total departure from them, but rather the diversification of chains and more supply-side protections.
This paper discusses the types of cross-border barriers to trade that exist in the two relationships - that of the US and China, and that of the UK and EU, and how they affect the growth, income, and welfare of the countries involved.