Protectionism risks rise in 2009-2010
Parallels with the 1930s abound. But the tariff wars of the 1930s belong to a vanished world of fixed exchange rates, militarism and failed multilateralism. The tariff history of the 1930s is not a good parallel for today’s world.
The real risk is a more insidious undeclared trade conflict based on rises in applied rates, non-tariff barriers, bad faith, and an upsurge in trade defenses as countries try to “allocate” scarce demand and placate industries and workers under particular pressure. Read more on John Kemp's blog...
Cities That Have Lost the Most Teams
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Since 2015, three different NFL franchises — the Rams, Chargers, and
Raiders — have moved to a new city. Though it has become rarer in recent
years, this i...
4 years ago
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