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The Transatlantic Economy 2022Â annual survey offers the most up-to-date set of facts and figures describing the deep economic integration binding Europe and the United States. It documents European-sourced jobs, trade and investment in each of the 50 U.S. states, and U.S.-sourced jobs, trade and investment in each member state of the European Union and other European countries. It reviews key headline trends and helps readers understand the distinctive nature of transatlantic economic relations. Key sectors of the transatlantic economy are integrating as never before, underpinning a multi-trillion-dollar economy that generates millions of jobs on both sides of the Atlantic and is registering heightened growth opportunities, despite a whirlwind of political uncertainty about the direction of U.S., EU and UK policies. The Transatlantic Economy 2022 explains: How war in Ukraine affects the U.S. and European economies. What trade spats, supply-chain logjams, COVID-19 and Brexit mean for the transatlantic economy. How U.S.-European commercial relations compare with those each has with China and other rising powers. How the digital economy is powering economic relations. The rise of the transatlantic energy economy. How decision-makers and business leaders can address current opportunities and challenges. The Transatlantic Economy 2022 provides key insights about the United States and Europe in the global economy, with often counterintuitive connections with important implications for policymakers, business leaders, and local officials.
The Risks and Rewards for the West in the Coming Multipolar World "A marked shift has occurred in the tone and assumptions
surrounding our national fortune. Nowhere is this better seen than
in the second generation of books dealing with America's financial
crisis, particularly Joseph P. Quinlan's "The Last Economic
Superpower."" The global economy, designed by Western powers with the United States as lead architect, is in the process of reconfiguration. The 2008 global financial crisis has terminated America's reign as sole economic superpower and opened up important new spheres of influence to developing nations. Does this signal the retreat of globalization as we know it? Has an economic "cold war" already begun? Will the West ever exert the kind of control and influence it enjoyed just a few short years ago? In "The Last Economic Superpower," Joseph P. Quinlan, a Wall Street veteran and expert on global economic affairs, addresses these questions and many others. Presenting his vision with refreshing clarity and objectivity, Quinlan examines: How America went from being a major creditor to the world's largest debtor nation in only two decades Five critical issues America must face in order to prevent permanent fragmentation of the global economy What the fading appeal of Europe and Japan means for the future of globalization What China, India, and others have that the West doesn't--and why this gives them unprecedented leverage Decisions made now will shape the course of history. "The Last Economic Superpower" outlines critical choices that must be made in order to recast, reinvent, and reenergize a new style of globalization. "The Last Economic Superpower" lays bare the issues and challenges that will decide whether the world builds a new, functional system that serves all or fragments into separate spheres of influence, which benefits no one.
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