The Uprising of the Global Middle Class
Andrea G
Moisés Naím / The Atlantic
Economic progress and increased prosperity do not always buy more political stability.
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Moisés Naím / The Atlantic
Economic progress and increased prosperity do not always buy more political stability.
Read MoreMoisés Naím / The Washington Post
Flags serve as a powerful symbol of a nation, its ideals, and its people.
Read MoreMoisés Naím / El País
Trump has put an end to the idea that corruption and nepotism at the highest levels of government can only flourish in banana republics
Read MoreMoisés Naím/ El País
Leadership in the fight against global warming is moving from the White House to Europe and China
Read MoreMoisés Naím / World Energy & Oil
Latin America is an energy giant hobbled by its politics. Its energy reality falls far short of its immense possibilities. This gap has many reasons—punitive regulations, lack of innovation, inadequate infrastructure, weak property rights, corruption and more. Latin America’s geology is great for energy production but its prevailing ideology is far less conducive to the adoption of successful energy policies. Indeed, politics underlies many of the obstacles that limit Latin America’s energy performance. From longstanding resource nationalism to the populism common throughout the region, politics has always shaped the way the Latin American nations explore, produce, consume and, in some cases, export energy.
Read MoreMoisés Naím / El País
The New World Order will be defined by those who fill the power gaps left by the United States
Read MoreMoisés Naím / The Atlantic
And removing him from office won’t ease the country’s misery.
Read MoreMoisés Naím / El País
He is simply the useful idiot, the puppet of those who really rule Venezuela.
Read MoreMoisés Naím / El País
Democracy contributes the most precious ingredient for tyrants: legitimacy
Read MoreMoisés Naím / The Atlantic
Around the world, politicians can follow a simple recipe to present themselves as saviors of “the people.”
Read MoreMoisés Naím / El País
What typically brings down people in power is the cover up, not the crime
Read MoreMoisés Naím / El País
The variety, intensity, vindictiveness, and, at times, the banality of the conflicts coming from Trump are not normal
Read MoreMoisés Naím / El País
A new study documents why mortality is higher among poorly educated whites
Read MoreMoisés Naím / El País
In three years it will be necessary to create 60 million jobs for young people in the region
Read MoreMoisés Naím / Columbia Journal for International Affairs, Special 70th Anniversary Issue
“War is God’s way of teaching Americans geography.” This well-known quip that satirist Ambrose Bierce made late in the nineteenth century has a contemporary version: “Attacks against the United States are God’s way of teaching Americans how weaker enemies are stronger than they seem.”
Read MoreMoisés Naím / El País
International hegemony of the Western powers, namely the US and Europe, could be coming to an end
Read MoreMoisés Naím / World Energy & Oil
The organization is no longer what it was—its power to influence stock prices continues to decline. Five key factors will push back against its efforts to stabilize oil prices
Read MoreMoisés Naím / El País
The president exhibits the classic symptoms of narcissistic personality disorder
Read MoreMoisés Naím / The Atlantic
In 2016, Russia used the American system against itself.
Read MoreMoisés Naím / World Energy & Oil
We know the story: Mother Nature is sending increasingly loud and frequent signals that something new and dangerous is afoot. Regularly, climate scientists release incontrovertible data showing that climate is changing and offer robust explanations of why this is happening. We also know the other part of this story: Not enough is being done by peoples and governments to alter a trajectory that is guaranteed to force drastic changes in the human condition.
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