Articles

  • Sep 4, 2024 | journals.sagepub.com | Yves Tiberghien

    Asian democracies and middle powers find themselves increasingly drawn into the cauldron generated by China's growing power projection and the strong security pushback from the US, accompanied by a partial withdrawal from the liberal institutional project. How are democracies such as Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Indonesia responding to this dangerous geopolitical tightrope?

  • Jun 4, 2024 | japantimes.co.jp | Bertrand Badré |Yves Tiberghien

    Today’s economic outlook is strangely contradictory. While global markets, led by technology and energy, have been ebullient over high short-term profits, the mood at the Spring Meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund recently was decidedly somber. Two global institutions that normally speak in banalities issued strong warnings about the growing risks of economic fragmentation.

  • Jun 4, 2024 | qoshe.com | Bertrand Badré |Yves Tiberghien

    Aa Aa Aa - A + Today’s economic outlook is strangely contradictory. While global markets, led by technology and energy, have been ebullient over high short-term profits, the mood at the Spring Meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund recently was decidedly somber. Two global institutions........ © The Japan Times visit website

  • May 22, 2024 | manilatimes.net | Bertrand Badré |Yves Tiberghien

    PARIS/VANCOUVER — Today's economic outlook is strangely contradictory. While global markets, led by technology and energy, have been ebullient over high short-term profits, the mood at the Spring Meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) last month was decidedly somber. Two global institutions that normally speak in banalities issued strong warnings about the growing risks of economic fragmentation.

  • May 21, 2024 | cn.theasset.com | Bertrand Badré |Yves Tiberghien

    Today’s economic outlook is strangely contradictory. While global markets, led by technology and energy, have been ebullient over high short-term profits, the mood at the spring meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund last month was decidedly sombre. Two global institutions that normally speak in banalities issued strong warnings about the growing risks of economic fragmentation.

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