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Project Syndicate
By Project Syndicate - Sep 17,2019
By Manuel Muñiz and Marietje SchaakeBRUSSELS/MADRID — The European Union’s new leadership team must reform and deepen the bloc and strengthen its global influence. Making Europe much more innovative should therefore be at the top of the priority list.There is no time to waste.
By Project Syndicate - Sep 15,2019
By Philippe Douste-Blazy and Carl Manlan PARIS/LOMÉ — In many developing countries, women come together on a regular basis to contribute their earnings to a common pot.
By Project Syndicate - Sep 12,2019
By Kemal DerviWASHINGTON, DC — When world leaders gather in New York later this month for the annual United Nations General Assembly meetings, they will have much to discuss besides climate change and sustainable development.
By Project Syndicate - Sep 12,2019
By Alexandra BorchardtOXFORD — The British public cannot get enough news about Brexit, at least, that is what news platforms’ data analytics say.
By Project Syndicate - Sep 10,2019
By Ian Buruma LONDON — The idea that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is a man of the people, a tribune of the common man fighting the established elites, might seem anomalous, even outright bizarre.
By Project Syndicate - Sep 09,2019
By Raghuram G. RajanCHICAGO — Another day, another attack on trade.
By Project Syndicate - Sep 09,2019
By Martin ReesCAMBRIDGE — Biomedical advances in recent decades have been hugely beneficial, most of all for the world’s poor, whose life expectancy has increased dramatically. But the future looks more dangerous.
By Project Syndicate - Sep 04,2019
By Susan Lund and Laura Tyson BERKELEY — The US labour market is posting healthy numbers, for now.
By Project Syndicate - Sep 04,2019
By Olga Morawczynski, Julie ZollmannTORONTO — Last May, just before Uber’s $82.4 billion initial public offering, the company’s drivers, together with those for its fellow ride-hailing platform Lyft (many drive for both), participated in an international day of industrial ac
By Project Syndicate - Aug 29,2019
By Shang-Jin Wei NEW YORK — The recent inversion of the yield curve in the United States, with the interest rate on ten-year US government bonds currently lower than that on short-term bonds, has raised fears of a possible US recession later this year or in 2020.

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