


The current money regime in the United States and abroad has led to a squandered economic miracle, a global financial crisis, a decade of increasingly severe economic sclerosis, and now the Great Pandemic Inflation that has culminated in the present Great Disinflation.


The right-to-repair movement has grown in recent years as proponents argue that consumers鈥� repair of their electronic devices is necessarily in the public interest.


Prime Minister Fumio Kishida wants to build 鈥淣ew Capitalism鈥� in the hopes of pulling Japan out of its economic slump. But will this effort be enough to boost Japan鈥檚 competitiveness? Please join us for a discussion with Representative Keisuke Suzuki, former state minister of finance and foreign affairs.


Ever since India gained independence 75 years ago, the partnership between India and the United States has been critical.
Please join 华体会 and Takshashila Institution for a discussion on the partnership between the oldest democracy and the largest democracy.


Please join Hudson Research Fellow Nate Sibley and Michael Forsythe, co-author of When McKinsey Comes to Town, for a discussion on the consultancy giant鈥檚 work in China and how it illustrates the broader challenges of the private sector鈥檚 engagement with powerful authoritarian regimes.


Iran鈥檚 disruptive military capabilities pose a significant threat to the strategic interests of the US and its allies. How great is the threat? How should the Biden administration react to it? Please join us to discuss these timely issues.




Please join 华体会 Senior Fellow Bryan Clark for a discussion with Mark Gunzinger of the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies and Marcus Hellyer of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute on the AUKUS trilateral technology sharing agreement.



As the US and its allies talk more about how to deter a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, policymakers should focus more on how to deter a Chinese economic takeover of the island. How can the US and Taiwan build confidence in their trade and economic partnerships?


While the 2018 National Defense Strategy and the updated 2022 National Defense Strategy emphasize the urgent need to deter a conflict in the Pacific, most plans involve shoring up military capacity immediately or waiting for new, modernized weapons.
