In this book, an expert in the field explains why the United
States is the world's largest debtor nation and how America's
relationship to creditor states is of growing economic, diplomatic,
and even national security concern. Foreign countries are not
merely investing in U.S. corporations but are purchasing them
outright: Abu Dhabi bought Citigroup securities, Kuwait purchased a
large block Merrill Lynch stock, and China bought Morgan Stanley's
convertible securities-and this happened before the September 2008
meltdown of Wall Street. The means by which wealthy foreign states
make these purchases are sovereign wealth funds, their surplus
capital that they are seeking to invest in order to generate the
greatest return. Currently, the largest sovereign wealth funds are
held by the United Arab Emirates (of which Abu Dhabi is part),
Norway, Singapore, Kuwait, and the People's Republic of China;
Qatar and Libya are also in the top ten. The United States has no
such fund (although the state of Alaska does). This book takes a
close look at China's and Norway's sovereign wealth funds to
explain how they work. The author also uses domestic examples
(Harvard's endowment, the California's state employees' retirement
fund) to propose how the United States could create a sovereign
wealth fund, speculating that such a fund could solve the looming
Social Security funds shortfall. Most important, the book
elucidates the national security aspects of not having an American
sovereign wealth fund when so many other nations-both friend and
foe-have them.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!