RealTime Economic Issues Watch
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RealTime Economic Issues Watch

In RealTime posts, PIIE senior staff and colleagues discuss the fast-moving economic news, financial developments, and public policy choices confronting the United States and the world.

Slovenia Must Handle Its Banking Crisis!

by Anders Aslund | April 9th, 2013 | 05:18 pm

The next euro country in possible need of an international stabilization program is not Italy but Slovenia. It is suffering from a moderate banking crisis. Newly appointed center-left Prime Minister Alena Bratusek argues that an international assistance program might not be necessary. She might be right, but only if the Slovenian government acts hard and [...]

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India’s Disputed Ruling on Pharmaceuticals and Patents

by Arvind Subramanian | April 4th, 2013 | 03:06 pm

On April 1, the Indian Supreme Court rejected the attempt by Novartis, the Swiss pharmaceutical company, to patent a new version of the leukemia drug Glivec. The latest verdict follows previous rulings that granted compulsory licenses to an Indian generic drug manufacturer for a kidney cancer drug (Nexavar) patented by Bayer. Five important questions are [...]

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The Euro Crisis after Cyprus: What We Have Learned

by Anders Aslund | April 3rd, 2013 | 11:49 am

Just as suddenly as it arose, the Cyprus financial crisis has passed by. The banks have opened and so has the stock market without undue panic. A few steps remain in the euro crisis, but this crisis is abating, and however messily Europe has handled it. Today, the questions are what we have learned, and [...]

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Did Cyprus Set a Dangerous Precedent? Some Further Thoughts

by Jacob Funk Kirkegaard | March 29th, 2013 | 02:41 pm

My RealTime posting on March 25 about the potential precedent set by the Cyprus bailout deal provoked much commentary focusing on the impact in the euro banking system. Let me elaborate. The precedent of imposing losses on uninsured depositors in Laiki Bank and the Bank of Cyprus was a sound one, but that does not [...]

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Change Comes (Slowly) to the Bank of England

by David J. Stockton | March 26th, 2013 | 11:38 am

In the past couple weeks, there have been signals that change is coming to the forecasting and monetary policy process of the Bank of England—incremental change, but change nonetheless. Last year, the Court of the Bank of England commissioned three reviews of various aspects of the Bank’s performance during and after the financial crisis, which [...]

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Act II in Cyprus: Securing a Much Improved Deal

by Jacob Funk Kirkegaard | March 25th, 2013 | 05:09 pm

After a week of threats, protests, and alarm in financial markets, Cyprus and its bailout partners reached a deal early Monday morning that was far better than the outcome negotiated earlier in the month. Instead of socializing the costs of their failure across the entire Cypriot population, [pdf] Cyprus and the Troika (consisting of the [...]

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Europe’s Cyprus Blunder and Its Consequences

by Nicolas Véron | March 22nd, 2013 | 10:24 am

The late Mike Mussa of the Peterson Institute, a former Chief Economist of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), noted about some episodes of the late-1990s Asian financial turmoil that “there are three types of financial crises: crises of liquidity, crises of solvency, and crises of stupidity.” This quip comes to mind when considering the developments [...]

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Why the United Kingdom Should Adopt a Nominal GDP Target

by Tomas Hellebrandt | March 21st, 2013 | 05:15 pm

The review [pdf] of the United Kingdom’s monetary policy framework published alongside the budget on March 20 reveals that the UK Treasury has ruled out replacing inflation targeting with nominal GDP targeting. That is a shame. Nominal GDP targeting would provide more space for the Bank of England to support the recovery in the near [...]

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Russia to the Rescue? Why Moscow May Bail Out Cyprus

by Anders Aslund | March 21st, 2013 | 09:54 am

Suddenly, Russia has become a central player in the Cypriot financial crisis. On the very evening after the Cypriot parliament rejected a proposed levy on bank deposits that the Cypriot president had previously accepted as a condition for a bailout package of €10 billion, Finance Minister Michael Sarris flew from Nicosia to Moscow. The next [...]

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European Public Debt Swings Wildly

by Anders Aslund | March 20th, 2013 | 11:16 am

This is the third in a series of postings by Mr. Aslund about debt and fiscal issues in Europe. A previous essay, “EU Countries Know How to Slash Public Expenditures,” was posted March 11. Natalia Aivazova has provided able research assistance. A proposition widely shared among economists is that it is very difficult for western [...]

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