Showing posts with label Economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Economics. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Hearing Key Points: "Multilateral Economic Institutions and U.S. Foreign Policy"

(Working Draft)

"Multilateral Economic Institutions and U.S. Foreign Policy"

Hearing held on November 27, 2018 before the:
U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
Subcommittee on Multilateral International Development, Multilateral Institutions, and International Economic, Energy, and Environmental Policy

Witnesses:

Panel 1:
The Honorable David Malpass, Under Secretary, International Affairs, United States Department of Treasury

Written Testimony (Pending) Key Points:

The Honorable Roland de Marcellus, Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary, International Finance and Development, Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs, United States Department of State

Panel 2:
The Honorable Clay Lowery, Visiting Fellow, Center for Global Development
Mr. Scott Morris, Senior Fellow and Director, United States Development Policy Initiative, Center for Global Development
Ms. Elizabeth Drake, Partner, Schagrin Associates
Ms. Thea Lee, President, Economic Policy Institute
Ms. Stephanie Segal, Senior Fellow and Deputy Director, Simon Chair in Political Economy, Center for Strategic and International Studies

Friday, September 21, 2018

AES and ROI Report

NIST released a report making a best effort to provide the economic return on investment for the development of its AES cryptographic algorithm standard.

The report covers the following topics: background, economic analysis framework, economic impact assessment approach, survey results and findings, economic impact of the AES program, 1996-2017, and overall impact assessment conclusions.

This table from the report details the AES Competition Candidate Algorithms:

https://doi.org/10.6028/NIST.GCR.18‐017

Thursday, September 13, 2018

"The Billionaire Raj: A Journey Through India's New Gilded Age"

"The Billionaire Raj"
Source: Amazon.com

James Crabtree, the former Mumbai bureau chief for the Financial Times, wrote a book about India’s colorful economic and political scene.

With over 1 billion people, the country ranks as the sixth largest global economy based on nominal GDP. According to a New World Wealth report India is the home to over 330,000 high net-worth individuals, 20,000 plus multimillionaires, and over 100 billionaires. Still the country has incredible inequality; the country’s top 1 percent now own nearly 60 percent of its wealth.

The Gilded Age analogy paints the picture of the country's rapid economic growth and the increasing wealth of the few people who dominate India's industrial economy, equivalent to the Rockefeller’s of America’s late 19th and early 20th century. Mr Crabtree reveals an intimate story of some of the country's tycoons and political power brokers and believes the country will benefit from its own version of a progressive era. From a review in “The Economist”:
The analysis really sings when Mr Crabtree finds new ways to capture the collision of profits, politics and public opinion. His account of India’s cut-throat network-TV industry, through the eyes of a star presenter, is thrilling. And he explores the paradox of India’s “southern belt” of states, most notably Tamil Nadu, which have their share of charismatic politicians and graft, but are also relatively rich. They have developed an efficient kind of populism, he concludes, in contrast to the purely venal politics farther north.
The book’s main flaw is that it gives a narrow view of the business world. Like Russia and other parts of Asia, India has its politically connected moguls. But it also has what may be the world’s most vibrant tech scene after America and China, a large stock of investment by multinational companies and a cohort of professionally run firms that compete in global markets.
Amazon reviews.