The U.S.-Latin America Agenda A new year, a new U.S. President and lots of questions for Latin America: How will Biden react to the next wave of populist rulers? Will Cuba and Nicaragua be an ...
Latin America will face an unprecedented fall in remittances this year, according to a World Bank report launched today. The expected 19.3% reduction will be greater than the 12.3% drop during the global financial crisis ...
By Robert D. Atkinson, President, Information Technology and Innovation Foundation Nowadays it’s almost impossible to write about trade policy without commenting on the rapidly evolving China-U.S. trade conflict. How and if China and the United ...
By Cynthia Arnson, Director, Latin American Program, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars With a handful of notable exceptions, the tone and substance of Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s recent swing through five Latin American ...
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By Jerry Haar Trade agreements are like oysters, Jägermeister and Jackson Pollock paintings—you either love them or hate them. In the current political milieu, anti-trade proponents have the upper hand, relegating vocal champions of free ...
By Jerry Haar In both political and military battles there are casualties. During this election season, one of the most notable casualties is free trade. The bipartisan piling on –slamming NAFTA, TPP, WTO and single ...
There is an old saying in my country that goes, “when the United States sneezes, Mexico gets pneumonia.” So what happens when our neighbor to the North contracts a rare case of anti-immigrant, anti-trade, and anti-Mexico ...
By Eric Farnsworth, Vice President COA, Washington Office Trade is never a popular topic in a presidential election year, but 2016 may prove to be an inflection point. For the first time since the Depression, the ...