Essays

America Must Lead a Rescue of Emerging Economies

  • Financial Times
  • October 28, 2008

The global financial system as it is currently constituted is characterised by a pernicious asymmetry. The financial authorities of the developed countries are in charge and they will do whatever it takes to prevent the system from collapsing.

How to Capitalize the Banks and Save Finance

  • Financial Times
  • October 12, 2008

Now that Hank Paulson has recognised that the troubled asset relief programme is best used to recapitalise the banking system, it is important to spell out exactly how it should be done.

Recapitalize the Banking System

  • Financial Times
  • October 1, 2008

The emergency legislation before Congress was ill-conceived - or, more accurately, not conceived at all. As Congress tried to improve what Treasury requested, an amalgam plan has emerged that consists of Treasury's original troubled asset relief programme and a quite different capital infusion programme in which the government invests in and stabilises weakened banks and profits from the economy's eventual improvement.

Paulson Cannot be Allowed a Blank Check

  • Financial Times
  • September 24, 2008

Hank Paulson's $700bn rescue package has run into difficulty on Capitol Hill. Rightly so: it was ill-conceived. Congress would be abdicating its responsibility if it gave the Treasury secretary a blank check.

Remarks delivered at the First Roma Summit

  • Brussels, Belgium
  • September 16, 2008
The European Union is, in my opinion, today perhaps the world’s best example of an open society, guided by the principles of democracy, tolerance, and international cooperation. An open society, in my definition, is an imperfect society that holds itself open to improvement.

The Perilous Price of Oil

  • The New York Review of Books
  • August 27, 2008

All this has occurred at the same time as a world credit crisis that started with the collapse of the US housing bubble. The rising cost of oil, coming on top of the credit crisis, has slowed the world economy and reinforced the prospect of a recession in the US.

A Danish Fix For the US Mortgage Crisis

  • Financial Times
  • August 11, 2008

The recent compromise struck between the Treasury and Democrats in Congress on the fate of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored mortgage guarantors, constitutes the worst of all possible worlds. The Treasury offered a blank cheque to come to the rescue, if necessary, but the managements of both companies were kept in place.

The Macleans.ca Interview

  • Macleans.ca
  • June 12, 2008
As a speculator, George Soros is perhaps most famous for bringing the Bank of England to the brink of collapse in 1997, raking in over $1 billion in a single day. As a philanthropist, he's indelibly associated with any number of political causes. But in his new book, The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crisis of 2008 and What It Means, Soros confesses he's always "desperately wanted" to be taken seriously, not as an investment guru or as a political agitator, but as a philosopher.

Soros: Global Investing’s Godfather

  • CNN Money
  • May 13, 2008
George Soros retired as a multibillionaire. But now he's back, hedging his wealth against what he calls the worst economic crisis in 75 years. Broke and friendless in postwar London, having just spent his last penny on food, 22-year-old George Soros made the first of a lifetime of prescient economic calls. "I have touched bottom," he told himself, "and I am bound to rise."