The Happiness Imperative

Our modern cornucopia of consumer goods is supposed to make us happier, but it doesn't. Here's why.

Going for the Gold: A Letter from Peru

Speculation has touched off the biggest gold rush in history, and that gold rush is straining Peru's society and environment.

Iraq, the New King of OPEC?

Iraq will become the world’s second-largest oil exporter within two decades and will account for 45 percent of the growth in global supplies this decade, according to an International Energy Agency report examined by the Financial Times.All this will come to pass, of course, if Iraq remains stable enough to continue growing its oil production. […]

Why the China-Burma Break-up Matters

It all started with the Myitsone Dam in northern Burma. The dam’s Chinese builders, confident that they had the support of the decision-makers who mattered (Burmese politicians), ignored or were unaware of local resistance to the dam. But the Chinese soon found out just how important local resistance can be. The locals protested, and Thein […]

Nationalism on the Rise in Japan? Blame China

China’s recent assertiveness in Asia continues to set off destabilizing consequences that are unfavorable for China’s own interests, as Michael Auslin writes in the WSJ: Mr. [Yoshihiko] Noda [Japan’s Prime Minister] has pushed back forcefully against Beijing’s pressure. He dispatched 50 Coast Guard cutters to the islands, refused to surrender Japan’s claims of ownership, and bluntly […]

Striking Miners, Plummeting Currency: Few Good Options for South Africa

The labor turmoil in South Africa is spreading to the financial markets, and South Africa’s currency, the rand, is plunging against the weak U.S. dollar.For political economists, Africa wonks, and geopoliticians, this is bad news. Just as the fabulous mineral wealth in South Africa’s mines serves as an engine for the whole economy, labor relations […]

What’s Wrong, and How to Fix It, Part 1: Introduction, and Globalization/Automation

Editor’s Note: Following is the first in a series of posts analyzing the sources of American political dysfunction and proposing a programmatic response to those problems.Some months ago my colleague here at The American Interest, Walter Russell Mead, wrote a series of intellectually high-end blog posts analyzing the collapse of what he called the “blue […]

Nigerian Police Kill 30 Civilians in Shooting Spree

If you want to learn how countries fail, studying Nigeria today wouldn’t be a waste of time. The BBC reports on a grisly, sad story: Nigerian troops have opened fire and burned buildings in the north-eastern city of Maiduguri, reportedly killing 30 civilians.The shootings came after a bomb blast targeting the army had injured two […]

IMF Lowers Hopes for Global Turnaround

The chattering classes are moaning today about the world economy. The IMF has reduced its economic forecast yet again, lowering growth projections across the board in its World Economic Outlook. Altogether, global GDP is projected to grow 3.3 percent in 2012, down from a July estimate of 3.5 percent. The FT explains the IMF’s reasons for the downgrade: The euro […]

Protestants No Longer Hold Majority in the US

CBS News reports: The percentage of Protestant adults in the U.S. has reached a low of 48 percent, the first time the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life has reported with certainty that the number has fallen below 50 percent. The drop has long been anticipated and comes at a time when no Protestants are on […]

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