Wall Street Journal (November 13)
“South of the border, China is ascendant,” having successfully “capitalized on U.S. indifference in Latin America.” The world’s second most populous nation has now “replaced the U.S. as the dominant trading partner for most big economies, with the exceptions of Mexico and Colombia.” Beijing has also “signed up most of Latin America and the Caribbean to an infrastructure program that excludes the U.S.”
Tags: Ascendant, Big economies, Border, Capitalized, China, Colombia, Dominant, Indifference, Latin America, Mexico, Trading partner, U.S.
Barron’s (December 10)
As it attempts to address inflation without derailing the recovery (or worse), the Fed will be walking a tight rope. On the upside, “the banking system is now both better capitalized and less exposed to illiquidity risk than in the past.” Moreover, “both households and firms are in better shape to weather higher interest costs now than they were in 1981 or, indeed, other episodes of monetary tightening.”
Tags: Banking system, Capitalized, Derailing, Exposed, Fed, Firms, Households, Illiquidity, Inflation, Interest costs, Recovery, Risk
