By PETER S. GOODMAN
Published: March 8, 2009, NYT
As the world is seized with anxiety in the face of a spreading financial crisis, the one place having a considerably easier time attracting money is, perversely enough, the same place that started much of the trouble: the United States.
...
“Virtually all of the low-income countries are in very serious trouble,” said Eswar Prasad, a former official at the International Monetary Fund and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, the liberal-leaning research organization in Washington.
He went on: “This is the third wave of the financial crisis. Low-income countries are getting hit very hard. The flow of private capital to the emerging market has dried up.”
...
“Depreciation isn’t enough now to offset the global contraction,” said Mr. Setser, noting that export powers like Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Brazil have had rapid declines in sales in recent months. “Everybody’s looking vulnerable. All commodity exporters are potentially subject to currency crises.”
...
“It’s a huge safe haven effect,” said William R. Cline, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. “The basic assumption that people are making is that the U.S. government will never default on its debt.”
...
“The fact that we can still borrow at lower interest rates is saving us from much more severe adjustments,” Mr. Rogoff said. “We’re really still staring down an abyss.”
---Joy, Passion, Pride and Love
---Stand on the Giants
---Make the World Beautiful
Yundong Tu's Webpage
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2009
(172)
-
▼
March
(48)
- How will the April Fools' computer worm affect you?
- Do you know this about Tenure?
- Popularity of Economics (3)
- Ease high unemployment rate in China
- If You're So Smart, Why Aren't You Rich?
- Albert Rees in the eyes of Ashenfelter and Pencavel
- Passion from the White House
- Economic joy with the Young
- Lost in words
- Feel Better About Yourself
- Tips for feeling better about yourself
- Calls for a model
- who will users blame?
- “Is the new bull market starting?”
- A nascent sign of recovery
- Popularity of Economics (2)
- Teaching economics during rough times
- Popularity of Economics
- Unemployment rate as high as 11 per cent in Michigan
- Data Envelopment Analysis
- Second thoughts on bootstrap
- Ranking of Economics Departments
- Black Friday on 13th?
- Economists disagree, but who is more confident reg...
- Nonparametrics becomes the focus
- Losing A Job May Help You Find Yourself
- Mathematical Model and the Mortgage Mess
- They Tried to Outsmart Wall Street
- Reviving the Dream
- A Rising Dollar Lifts the U.S. but Adds to the Cri...
- Lessons from the Great Depression for Economic Rec...
- Half-Space
- Soaking the Rich?
- Blogger Responds to Economic Crisis?
- Amazing people at Berkeley---MICHAEL JANSSON
- What Rain Man is
- Serial Correlation and Serial Dependence
- Overview of Statistical Estimation Theory
- Specification testing
- A letter to mum
- Weak Exogeneity
- Are regression models useful?
- Broken in two
- From Limbless to Limitless
- Efficient Local Polynomial Estimation of Nonparame...
- Shopper City
- How to be a great conference participant?
- The spirit of perfection
-
▼
March
(48)
No comments:
Post a Comment