Financial globalization
The decades-long trend of globalization has largely served to advance the interests of corporations and highly-paid professionals, often at the expense of the majority of America’s workers. Many of the free trade agreements the United States has entered have cost American jobs and depressed the wages of most working Americans. EPI’s work on trade policy focuses on workers and measures how they are impacted by free trade.
All work on this topic
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Reducing U.S. trade deficits will generate a manufacturing-based recovery for the United States and Ohio: Ending currency manipulation by China and others is the place to start
February 7, 2013 | | Report
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Austerity in the UK — losing the argument and the economy
April 25, 2012 | | Blog
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What to do about the eurozone?
April 4, 2012 | | Blog
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Eurozone crisis: Dogs and cats living together! Mass hysteria!
November 28, 2011 | | Blog
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Panel says Chinese currency manipulation costs jobs
March 15, 2010 | | Commentary
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U.S. Trade deficit falls in 2009, but larger share goes to China
February 11, 2010 | | Economic Indicators
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Is the financial crisis leading to a new global order?
October 13, 2009 | | Commentary
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Big business lobbies for importers
January 30, 2009 | | Commentary
