Articles by Bloomberg
Bloomberg
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[Noah Smith] Abenomics looks a lot like Reaganomics
Explaining Japan’s economy to Western audiences is hard.One big reason for this is that explaining something as large and complex as a $5 trillion economy is an inherently difficult task. A second reason is that Japan tends to be somewhat out of sync with the US and Europe -- when the US was struggling in the early 1980s, Japan was powering ahead, and when the US recovered in the 1990s, Japan stagnated. A third reason is that the economic institutions that govern Japan -- the centralized but wea
Viewpoints April 1, 2018
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[Leonid Bershidsky] Old anti-inequality policies are failing
The market creates income inequality; governments reduce it through taxes and social transfers. That’s the conventional picture -- only it doesn’t work as well as it used to, and new ways of fighting inequality are needed, likely focusing on moving more people into better-quality jobs. In a recent paper (and a shorter blog post), two economists at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Orsetta Causa and Mikkel Hermansen, explored how traditional redistribution has worked to c
Viewpoints April 1, 2018
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[Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry] France’s Ban on hate speech goes too far
French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced last week his government’s plan to “fight racism” to much fanfare. The cause is a worthy one (who can be against fighting racism?), but sadly the plan is a disaster. The government wants to make it much easier to ban any online content deemed to be racist or to be “promoting hatred.” One might ask why the urgency when, according to the official figures, hate crimes are down 16 percent from last year. French President Emmanuel Macron clearly feels
Viewpoints March 30, 2018
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[James Starvridis] A new Cold War is not inevitable
When I served as Supreme Allied Commander at NATO from 2009 to 2013, I developed a friendly relationship with the head of the Russian armed forces, Gen. Nikolai Makarov. He was a short, barrel-chested man with a congenial personal style, and given my own somewhat compact physique, I could at least tell my boss, Secretary of Defense Bob Gates, that I literally saw things “eye to eye” with my Russian counterpart. Our meetings occurred both in Moscow and several times in Brussels at NATO headquarte
Viewpoints March 29, 2018
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[Leonid Bershidsky] Europe‘s anti-Kremlin roll call was weak
There’s a fundamental flaw in the Russian propaganda narrative about the poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in the UK earlier this month: It assumes that Western nations want to gang up on Russia and punish it regardless of whether there’s any evidence linking it to the assassination attempt. In reality, the Western response to the incident shows how reluctant European nations are to escalate tensions with Russia. The diplomat expulsions announced on Monday we
Viewpoints March 29, 2018
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[Leonid Bershidsky] Escalation with Russia just became more likely
Despite a propaganda blitz meant to shift the blame for the poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in the UK earlier this month, Russia looks set to face bruising consequences. The newfound unity among European Union leaders on the matter and the appointment of fierce Russia hawk John Bolton as President Donald Trump’s national security adviser are potential precursors of collective Western action against Russia. The difficulty lies in figuring out how far that ac
Viewpoints March 27, 2018
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Kim Jong-un is said to make surprise China visit: Bloomberg
Kim Jong-un made a surprise visit to Beijing on his first known trip outside North Korea since taking power in 2011, three people with knowledge of the visit said.Further details of his trip, including how long Kim would stay and who he would meet, were not immediately available. The people asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the information.Speculation about a possible visit by a high-ranking North Korean official circulated around the Chinese capital Monday, after Japan’s
North Korea March 27, 2018
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[Hal Brands] Trump’s new national security guru: Himself
Donald Trump is becoming the president he always envisioned himself being -- and that many of the foreign-policy hands who opposed his candidacy always feared. Some critics view the removal of General H.R. McMaster as national security adviser, and his replacement by the longtime Republican hawk John Bolton, as proof that the president is looking for more “Trumpist” figures who will reinforce his inclination to deconstruct American global engagement. Actually, Bolton is not a full-throated suppo
Viewpoints March 26, 2018
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[Leonid Bershidsky] Why the EU approved Bayer-Monsanto
The European Union’s competition commissioner, Margrethe Vestager, has a reputation as something of an activist because of her willingness to take on US tech giants. And yet she has approved what is, from a leftist activist point of view, a particularly evil deal, Germany-based Bayer’s acquisition of US-based Monsanto. The $66 billion deal creates an incredible concentration in the seed and pesticide markets. If it’s approved in the US, too, the three biggest companies in this market -- Bayer-Mo
Viewpoints March 26, 2018
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[Francis Wilkinson] The NRA’s strategic blunder
You had to be there. As Americans took to the streets Saturday, defying a political order that, in Washington and many state capitals, has allowed extremists to write gun laws, the bodies -- of both the dead and the living who marched in their honor -- mattered a lot. Hundreds of thousands in cities big and small showed up. It was an extraordinary coming-out party for a movement that is now, at long last, undeniably mass. The marches against gun violence would not have been as big without the un
Viewpoints March 26, 2018
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[Noah Smith] As long as there are humans, there will be jobs
Predicting the course of technological progress is extremely difficult. Just because worries about human obsolescence ultimately turned out to be misplaced in the Industrial Revolution doesn’t mean that the same happy result must necessarily prevail this time around. So the persistent question about artificial intelligence -- or “robots” in common parlance -- is whether they will make human workers obsolete.Recent rapid progress in machine learning -- a very powerful and flexible statistical pre
Viewpoints March 26, 2018
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[Michael Schuman] Is Trump playing into Xi’s hands?
US President Donald Trump has finally carried out his threats on trade with China, announcing Thursday the start of a process that will lead to sweeping tariffs on Chinese imports and restrictions on Chinese investments. Trump hopes to compel a recalcitrant China to end a range of unfair business practices and open its market wider to US companies, thus reducing the large US trade deficit. In fact, Trump could be doing just the opposite -- taking the pressure off Chinese President Xi Jinping rat
Viewpoints March 25, 2018
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[Hal Brands] Why the US is back in business with ‘good’ authoritarians
From Eastern Europe to Southeast Asia, the US increasingly finds itself working with some illiberal regimes in order to contain others. Consider: Vietnam, an authoritarian, one-party state, recently hosted a US aircraft carrier for the first time since the end of the Vietnam War, continuing a long-term expansion of defense ties between the two former enemies.Poland, a backsliding, illiberal democracy, has become one of the cornerstones of Washington’s efforts to shore up NATO’s deterrence agains
Viewpoints March 25, 2018
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[Michael Schuman] Trump can’t win trade war alone
As US President Donald Trump prepares a wide-ranging package of tariffs and investment restrictions targeted at China, a trade war between the world’s two most important economies looks unavoidable. On the face of it, the US might seem to have the leverage it needs to win. Since it runs a huge trade deficit with China, the Chinese have a lot more to lose. But, there’s a flaw in Trump’s logic. He appears to have an outdated and exaggerated view of how big a role the US plays in the global economy
Viewpoints March 22, 2018
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[Daniel Moss] What China revealed in its national congress
In China, don’t forget the ones that got away. This month’s session of the National People’s Congress, the legislature that typically rubber stamps the Communist Party’s wishes, made plenty of headlines on personnel and policies. Also telling is what didn’t happen and who didn’t get what job. Notable omissions send important signals on what type of economy the incoming cabinet envisages and how much latitude the central bank, itself under new leadership, will have to steer it.The broader task fo
Viewpoints March 22, 2018
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