Globalisation
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Editorial: Countries are placing a higher priority on resilience and security in the wake of the pandemic and as tensions grow
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Survey by Munich Security Conference suggests nations define success as relative to others rather than the common good
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Economics viewpointShould the UK embrace higher net migration or rethink the economy?Larry ElliottIf the population is to grow on the scale predicted the UK will need the infrastructure to service a much-expanded citizenry
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Economics viewpointGlobalisation is not dead, but it is fading: ‘glocalisation’ is becoming the new mantraLarry ElliottIndustrial policy such as a green growth plan is no longer a dirty word as nations realise shorter supply chains and a strategic state role are necessary
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Editorial: Over the holidays, this column will explore next year’s urgent issues. Today we look at how the past helps us understand the dollar’s power and pitfalls
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Gita Gopinath says global economy’s fragmentation into power blocs risks wipeout of trillions of dollars in GDP
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In 1923, the country was rocked with hyperinflation, now the retreat from globalisation is exposing the fragility of its industrial model
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The politics of bubble tea: at last, Taiwanese food is getting the recognition it deserves
Clarissa WeiFor years, the island’s cuisine has been mistaken for ‘Chinese food’, says cookbook author Clarissa Wei
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Biden’s UN speech barely mentioned Russia and China. That’s no coincidence
Rajan Menon and Daniel R DePetrisBiden was pitching global cooperation to developing nations long suspicious of the US-dominated world order
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UK governments let processor manufacturing drift overseas for years. Now Covid and war have shown how vital homegrown capability is, the country is scrambling to catch up. But so is everyone else
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Our world is grappling with technological advances, shifts in geopolitical and economic power, globalisation backlash and climate change
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Using chemicals in the environment can save wildlife from deadly pathogens, but process is not without risks, say experts
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Economics viewpointAge of globalisation is now the age of instability – and we need a planLarry ElliottBridgetown Initiative could be way for rich nations’ development finance words to become action
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Project Syndicate economistsFrom near-shoring to friend-shoring: the changing face of globalisationMohamed El-ErianA new operating model for the global economy is upon us – its success will depend on how policymakers adapt
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Economics viewpointThe pendulum swung against globalisation in 2022 – and that’s no bad thingLarry ElliottClimate crisis, Ukraine invasion and China-US tensions are challenging assumption free markets are best
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A wave of bestselling authors claim that global affairs are still ultimately governed by the immutable facts of geography – mountains, oceans, rivers, resources. But the world has changed more than they realise. By Daniel ImmerwahrPodcast
In an increasingly unstable world, Britain can’t afford to isolate itself from its allies