The IMF has drastically scaled back growth forecasts for the U.S. and a host of other economies for 2025.
The U.S. president’s economic agenda collides with fragile financial systems, triggering market fears, investor flight and developing nation chaos.
The U.S. disengagement from key regions such as the Middle East and Africa has allowed Moscow to assert itself.
The best that Africa can hope for from an isolationist Trump administration is a further withdrawal of U.S. troops from Africa.
The U.S., as a prominent global economic and financial hub, offers substantial prospects for the growth of Islamic finance.
The predicament the U.S. must really face is the state of its own industries.
If Trump wins the U.S. presidential election, the impact of the U.S. on Ukrainian politics may become controversial and ambiguous.
The irony here is that the U.S. and its allies have been partly responsible for the resurgence of BRICS.
After 1945, the U.S. dollar emerged from the ashes and rubble of World War II to grant the U.S. significant geopolitical leverage.
U.S. President Joe Biden offered in his recent State of the Union address something wholly divorced from reality.
The increase in interest rates in the U.S. no longer scares speculators and traders so much.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen called on the World Bank and other international lenders to support developing countries.