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Browse: Home » Patrick Smith » Page 32
Now Even Japan Says ‘No Nukes’

Now Even Japan Says ‘No Nukes’

July 21, 2011 · by Patrick Smith · in Articles, The Fiscal Times

Germany did it a little more than a month ago, and Italy followed suit a week later. Now Japan’s prime minister has taken a stand against nukes. “In the future,” Naoto Kan told a nationwide television audience last week, “we…

How the Debt Crisis Could Remake Europe

How the Debt Crisis Could Remake Europe

July 19, 2011 · by Patrick Smith · in Articles, The Fiscal Times

Maybe now we will all understand why the ancient adage “May you live in interesting times” was intended not as a blessing but as a curse. Last week wasmore than interesting in Europe: It was of historical importance—and bone-rattling in…

Britain Reels from Brutal Austerity--GDP, Jobs Disappoint

Britain Reels from Brutal Austerity–GDP, Jobs Disappoint

July 14, 2011 · by Patrick Smith · in Articles, The Fiscal Times

This summer has seen Greeks rioting in the streets over austerity measures and now Italians having a bad case of agita as their economy teeters. But if Europe’s nerves are frayed, so are Britain’s. Although not part of the 12-nation…

One (Faint) Cheer for Rupert Murdoch

One (Faint) Cheer for Rupert Murdoch

July 13, 2011 · by Patrick Smith · in Articles, The Fiscal Times

It’s hard to have pity for Rupert Murdoch, who decided that retreat is the best—and probably only—course of action and withdrew his bid for the 60.9% of BskyB that he doesn’t already control. General Murdoch’s decision to withdraw and regroup…

Greek Debt: How Much for the Acropolis?

Greek Debt: How Much for the Acropolis?

July 8, 2011 · by Patrick Smith · in Articles, The Fiscal Times

Greece is for sale. But is a sell-off of public assets a wise and politically viable solution to an Olympian debt crisis– especially since a dramatic divide is emerging between the government and the citizens it governs? As the daily…

America’s Dangerously Out-of-Date View of China

America’s Dangerously Out-of-Date View of China

June 27, 2011 · by Patrick Smith · in Articles, The Fiscal Times

America’s sluggish insistence that China remains a security threat as opposed to a powerful economic reality is leading to lost opportunities. Not quite four decades after Nixon visited Mao, the U.S. is still reluctant to see an emergent China for…

Maybe We’re Not So Dependent on China

Maybe We’re Not So Dependent on China

June 27, 2011 · by Patrick Smith · in Articles, The Fiscal Times

Central bankers are always secretive about what they do with their reserves, and China’s are no different. They’ve been hinting for years that they were tired of the risks associated with having too much of their hard-earned cash sitting in…

Kissinger’s Skilled Eye on China, Then and Now

Kissinger’s Skilled Eye on China, Then and Now

June 26, 2011 · by Patrick Smith · in Articles, The Fiscal Times

Nearing age 90 now, Henry Kissinger has set down in a new book his extraordinary challenge four decades ago, when he brought together Mao Tse-tung, the giant of the peasant revolution, with the dedicated anti-Communist,Richard M. Nixon.  On China (Penguin…

The Greek Tragedy Is All about Politics Now

The Greek Tragedy Is All about Politics Now

June 21, 2011 · by Patrick Smith · in Articles, The Fiscal Times

Greeks in the streets, as they have been in the tens of thousands almost daily, have brought Europe’s debt crisis to a new and highly volatile stage. Austerity plans are political now, and there’s no stepping back from this truth….

The ‘Arab Spring’ Can Help Cut Defense Spending

The ‘Arab Spring’ Can Help Cut Defense Spending

June 16, 2011 · by Patrick Smith · in Articles, The Fiscal Times

If we want to bring our unconscionably wasteful defense spending under control, the place to start is with a fundamentally re-imagined foreign policy that does not require a trillion-dollar military. President Obama’s recent pledge of $2 billion in response to…

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Writer, commentator, longtime newspaper and magazine correspondent abroad. Writes often on Europe and Asia. Published five books.

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