Lionel Barber, Financial Times

with Lionel Barber
in Business
on Tuesday, April 12, 2011 * * * * *

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Lionel Barber, Financial Times

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Keywords:
economy
hedge funds
banking
China
Economics
money
lehman
Barclays
Financial Crisis
Asia

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  • Comments 4
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    1. vongleichent  02/27/2012 02:20 PM Report

      I disagree the content on FT should be free just like facebook is.

    2. Tacitus  04/15/2011 11:17 AM Report

      As always, I greatly appreciate the interviews that Mr. Rose conducts. However, in addition to questions with regard to American leadership and the rise of China, I would like to also hear questions asked more frequently with regard to what role Europe will have in the 21st century. I am also interested in what the future holds for smaller, but highly developed countries such as Australia and South Korea.

      -Tacitus

      http://judtscafe.blogspot.com/

    3. tabs  04/13/2011 06:18 PM Report

      All one has to do in answering the Chinese concern about internal stability is to think of Chinese history for the previous 100 years before 1949. Further Mr Barbers comment about the Chinese leadership sounding like the "Tea Party," laughingly where has Mr Rose heard that train of thought being expressed over the past two years? With regards to the "relative" or "absolute" decline of America, one should ask the question of what happens if the Sovereign Debt of the USA should could back and bite the USA and world on the....and what happens to the status quo then? Barbarians at the gates of Washington as power abhors a vacuum? Does one want to roll the dice to find out?

    4. REMant  04/13/2011 11:10 AM Report

      China's productivity is still causing deflation, I'm sure, and the inflation is being caused by the US and European central banks, merely beginning to have an effect as that country continues to try to cope with it. If China falters, it will, like the explosion in the Middle East, be our fault. I don't mind the plug for the paper, since it appears, unlike The Economist, to be on the right side of things now.

      I don't know if I quite buy the notion that Cameron's stance on Libya was all righteous indignation. I had the impression he was being pressed by both Tories and Labour much as Obama, and I don't know where his Liberal partners are. The British public is, of course, agitated about Lockerbie, and Labour had been criticized for letting the alleged bomber go in return for oil. I am not surprised that this issue has shown the division it has in any case.