Peterson Institute lobby
The Peterson Institute for International Economics is a private, nonprofit, nonpartisan
research institution devoted to the study of international economic policy. More › ›
RSS News Feed Search

RealTime Economic Issues Watch

A website forum in which senior fellows of the Peterson Institute for International Economics discuss and debate their responses to global economic and financial developments as they occur each day and offer insights that others might overlook.

Archive: October 2009

New Fiscal Stimulus Is Not Warranted Now

by Simon Johnson | October 30th, 2009 | 04:54 pm

Yesterday morning I testified to a Joint Economic Committee of Congress hearing (update: that link may be fragile; here’s the JEC general page). The session discussed the latest GDP numbers, the impact of the fiscal stimulus earlier this year, and whether we need further fiscal expansion of any kind.
I argued that [...]

Read full post

Latvia, Lithuania, and the IMF

by Anders Aslund | October 29th, 2009 | 10:00 am

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has had a good year in Eastern Europe. It has been called to help numerous countries and it has acted fast and generously. It has learned several lessons from the East Asia financial crisis of 1997–98, which was very similar. The East European crisis is primarily [...]

Read full post

Is King Euro Naked?

by Carlo Bastasin | October 28th, 2009 | 10:49 am

Europeans may find several historical and theoretical reasons why a political government for the euro area would be desirable. But after the global crisis there are technical reasons why it is more than desirable. That conclusion is a necessity in light of three increasingly important aspects of current monetary developments in [...]

Read full post

Europe’s Banks Still Need Restructuring

by Nicolas Véron | October 26th, 2009 | 10:00 am

Most discussions about financial stability tend to focus on steps to ensure that last year’s meltdown does not happen again, including tighter regulation of capital and compensation policies, prevention of moral hazard through new resolution mechanisms, overhaul of supervisory structures, and reform of governance and disclosures.
But Europe’s policymakers should [...]

Read full post

Low Interest Rates May Be Here To Stay

by Joseph E. Gagnon | October 23rd, 2009 | 09:58 am

One of the most striking features of today’s economy is that interest rates, on everything from bank loans to Treasury bonds, are at 50-year lows. Federal Reserve actions to stabilize the financial system and stimulate economic growth contributed importantly to these low rates. There is much talk lately of the need [...]

Read full post