Published:
Newsweek: International Editions: Highlights and Exclusives, October 20, 2008 Issue
COVER: The Bright Side (All overseas editions). Newsweek International
Editor Fareed Zakaria writes that we're in for tough times. But amid all the
difficulties and hardship that we are about to undergo, the silver lining may
be that the crisis has forcedthe United States to confront the bad habits it
has developed over the last few decades. "If we can kick those habits, today's
pain will translate into gains in the long run," Zakaria writes. He writes
that two decades of easy money and innovative financial products meant that
virtually anyone could borrow any amount of money for any purpose. "At some
point, the magical accounting had to stop ...The United States -- and other
overleveraged societies -- has now gotten the wake-up call from hell. If we
can respond and change our behavior markedly, this might actually be a
blessing in disguise."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163449
Awakening From the All-American Dream. Zachary Karabell, president of
RiverTwice Research and senior adviser for Business for Social Responsibility,
writes that President George W. Bush's ownership ideology, which brought the
global financial system to an improbable brink of collapse, may end up having
the same effect on stable, nuclear families. "The irony is that more
homeownership and stock ownership has actually weakened traditional bonds. For
the past decade, as homeownership went up, marriages continued to fail. Fewer
people are getting married as a percentage of the population than at the
beginning of the decade."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163653
The Ownership Myth. Robert Shiller, Arthur M. Okun Professor of Economics
at Yale University, and cofounder of MacroMarkets LCC, writes in a guest essay
that he thinks the broad home -- and stock -- ownership inthe United States
and abroad is a good thing. "But limits need to be set. To the extent that an
equity culture leads to entrepreneurship and investment and wealth creation,
I'm for it," he writes. He likes to think of "as a game. We need to make sure
we structure the rules of the game in such a way that we don't get injured
while playing it."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163575
Dark Days for TheCity of London. London Reporter William Underhill
reports that British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's promise of a 500 billion
pound package intended to recapitalize the country's eight leading banks and
ensure their survival signals not only the end of the banks' swaggering and a
whole freewheeling, bonus-driven culture. The same charms that lured so many
foreign banks toLondon-little oversight by the authorities and flexible labor
markets -- are causing its downfall. The doom-mongers talk now of a future
City burdened with new regulations and robbed of its competitive edge overNew
York.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163581
'This Makes No Sense.' Tokyo Bureau Chief Christian Caryl reports that
Japan has become perhaps the most striking victim of collateral damage in the
credit crisis. Patrick Mohr, an equity strategist for Nikko Citigroup in
Tokyo, cites figures showing that Japanese financial institutions account for
a mere 2 percent of the $592 billion in credit-related write-offs worldwide in
recent weeks, hardly reason to doubt the integrity of the system. Yet the
Nikkei plunged 24 percent in the past week, the steepest decline in 59 years.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163580
Keeping It Green. Beijing Bureau Chief Melinda Liu reports thatChina
intends to keep in place measures to clean up its polluted capital.China's
leaders andBeijing residents were thrilled with the results of the green
drive, and ordinary folks have clamored to keep some measures in place. "The
Olympics taught us all a good lesson," says Wan Gang, the father ofChina's
green-car R&D program and the minister of science and technology. "Now people
all over the country have an urgent desire for a better environment."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163579
The Realist Resurgence. Middle East Regional Editor Christopher Dickey,
Contributing Editor John Barry and Moscow Bureau Chief Owen Matthews report
thatRussia is weaker than it looks. Most NATO leaders insist the world is too
interdependent to allow another cold war.Russia is not theSoviet Union. And
Western powers don't want to be drawn into a game of bluff that will only
inflate Vladimir Putin's prestige.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163577
WOMEN & LEADERSHIP: What Matters Most. In this fourth annual installment
of Newsweek's ongoing leadership series, 11 women-scientists, entrepreneurs,
artists and even an Olympian -- talk about pursuing their passions with a
determined sense of purpose, often because their life experiences gave them a
unique perspective. Featured this year: Tyra Banks; Dara Torres; Anna Sui;
Marta Vieira da Silva, football player; Yuriko Koike, former cabinet minister,
Japan; and Dalia Itzik, Speaker of the Knesset,Israel.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163603
GLOBAL INVESTOR: We Need a New Road Map. Contributor Jeffrey Garten, the
Juan Trippe professor of international trade and finance at the Yale School of
Management writes that policymakers need to look ahead a few years and to
sketch out what the global financial and economic landscape should look like.
However, "any attempt to mandate a definitive architecture for finance would
be impossible," Garten writes. He suggests a group of high-level experts not
in the fray should be convened to "vent ideas and come up with a few visions
of where global finance should be headed."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163585
WORLD VIEW: The Storm Clouds Spread. Mohamed A. El-Erian, co-CEO of bond
specialist PIMCO, writes that this crisis is different from past situations in
three key respects. "First is the transfer of problems from Wall Street to
Main Street ... Second, the policy response to date has been bold-indeed,
unprecedented-and yet insufficient ... Third, the crisis has altered the
financial landscape in a profound way, and shifted power away from unfettered
markets to greater government interference," he writes. "The result will be a
significantly more regulated global financial system that will gain greater
short-term stability at the cost of long-term productivity and flexibility."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163583
THE LAST WORD: Shimon Peres, President ofIsrael. Peres spoke about his
undaunted hope for a peacefulMiddle East. "The last government had some
achievements. The gaps between us and the Palestinians were narrowed,
particularly on land and borders . . . Also, there's a beginning of an
understanding on how to solve the refugee problem. There are serious talks on
security. We haven't yet touched the burning question ofJerusalem, but we
don't start from zero game."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163584
SOURCE Newsweek
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