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New York Times (January 23, 2014)

2014/ 01/ 24 by jd in Global News

“It is hard to imagine a country more miserable than the Central African Republic.” Though potentially rich, the country has been repeatedly looted by previous leaders. Ongoing conflict has displaced a quarter of the population and claimed 1,000 lives since December. “So, to the degree to which they can offer any hope for this broken-down state, the announcement of a new interim president, a decision by the European Union to send a peacekeeping force and a pledge of half-a-billion dollars in humanitarian aid are all good news.”

 

The Financial Times (January 20, 2014)

2014/ 01/ 20 by jd in Global News

“At a time when US federal government is largely paralysed, it is in the states–and particularly the cities–where America’s future is being played out.” City leaders are innovating to solve problems they can no longer rely on Washington to solve. This is hardly new. “The abiding lesson of most of US history is that when Washington fails to function, the action moves to the states, cities and municipalities.” This is what “keeps the US moving.”

 

The Economist (July 20)

2013/ 07/ 22 by jd in Global News

European leaders are beginning to address the youth unemployment crisis, but the measures they are introducing “suffer from the same flaws that have plagued the European Union’s response to the crisis over the past three years: a lack of boldness, an incomplete analysis of the problem and an excessive faith in copying German policies.” With nearly 8 million European youth not in work, education or training, the problem is massive and the proposed measures “not nearly enough.”

 

Washington Post (July 17)

2013/ 07/ 18 by jd in Global News

With China’s economy decelerating, “ the world waits to see if it will make hard reforms. “Most big developing countries — China, India, Brazil, South Africa — have slowed down in the past few years. In almost all cases, the cause was the same. When their the economies were booming, these countries’ leaders avoided tough decisions. China had been the exception to this rule. But now it faces its biggest test…. If it fails, well, China becomes just another emerging market with a model that worked for a while.”

 

The Economist (May 25, 2013)

2013/ 05/ 25 by jd in Global News

“Unfortunately, the idea that the euro is yesterday’s problem is a dangerous figment. In reality, Europe’s leaders are sleepwalking through an economic wasteland…. For everyone’s sake, Europe’s leaders must shake themselves out of their lethargy. They must grasp that if they do not act, the euro zone faces stagnation or break-up—possibly both.”

 

The Economist (March 2)

2013/ 03/ 04 by jd in Global News

Africa has achieved a dramatic transformation. “Never in the half-century since it won independence from the colonial powers has Africa been in such good shape.” The credit belongs to the Africans themselves. “The continent’s main saviours are its own people. They are embracing modern technology, voting in ever more elections and pressing their leaders to do better. A sense of hope abounds.” The transformation is laudable, but “still incomplete. The danger is that Africa settles for today’s pace of change. Only if Africans raise their ambitions still further will they reach their full potential. If aspiring Africa wants a new dream, it should be creating a common market from the Med to the Cape. That would be a boon to trade, enterprise and manufacturing: it would also get rid of much of the petty corruption and save lives.”

 

The Independent (July 22)

2011/ 07/ 24 by jd in Global News

In assembling the latest bailout plan for Greece, European leaders have again “done the bare minimum required of them.” They have successfully “bought some time, but not much. Their failure to agree on a radical plan of action to restore confidence and address the root drivers of bond market panic means that this crisis is not over.”

 

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