The Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE) is an independent nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization dedicated to strengthening prosperity and human welfare in the global economy through expert analysis and practical policy solutions.
Learn MorePIIE’s renowned scholars explore and analyze a broad range of economic topics and issues, including globalization, economic and growth prospects, finance, political economy, and trade and investment, as well as economic challenges facing individual regions and countries.
View allEconomic policy research by the Institute’s 50+ internationally recognized scholars is the foundation of our mission and work.
learn moreOur widely recognized specialists on international economics bring their expertise to bear on a vast and diverse range of topics and regions.
View allPIIE's scholars draw on their research to provide commentary and analysis in a broad array of formats outside the Institute. Op-eds, testimony, speeches, and scholarly papers for other organizations all aim for the highest standards of objectivity, rigor and transparency required by the Institute for its own publications. Their writings are not intended to reflect an official view of the Institute or the views of members of the Institute's Board of Directors, and authors must adhere to strict standards of disclosure of any potential conflicts of interest.
Op-Eds
Understanding Biden’s Big Bet on India
Arvind Subramanian (PIIE)
via Project Syndicate
Op-Eds
Revitalizing the World Trading System
via Fifteen Eighty Four, Cambridge University Press blog
Op-Eds
Why China’s Property Tax Is Still a Long Way Off
Tianlei Huang (PIIE)
via Caixin
Op-Eds
It is time for the UK to think like an emerging market
via Financial Times
Speeches & Papers
Discarding a Utopian Vision for a World Divided: The Effect of Geopolitical Rivalry on the World Trading System
Speeches & Papers
The Cult of the Relevant: International Relations Scholars and Policy Engagement Beyond the Ivory Tower
Cullen S. Hendrix (PIIE), Julia Macdonald, Ryan Powers, Susan Peterson and Michael J. Tierney
via Perspectives on Politics, published by Cambridge University Press
Op-Eds
Anti-Neoliberalism as if the Poor Mattered
via Project Syndicate
Op-Eds
Why is the U.S. Debt Expected to Keep Growing?
Michael Klein (Tufts University) and Maurice Obstfeld (PIIE)
via EconoFact
Speeches & Papers
Celebrating the legacy of Adam Smith: Making the multilateral trading system great again
Op-Eds
Washington’s turn to neo-mercantilism
via East Asia Forum