Home
Categories
EXPLORE
Religion & Spirituality
True Crime
History
News
Music
Business
Society & Culture
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/5d/e3/24/5de32442-6591-6ad2-61de-87e08162f98b/mza_14589635190083408542.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce Global Intelligence Desk
54 episodes
2 days ago
Seven years ago, economists at Capital Economics, an independent macro-economic consultancy, issued a paper entitled The Coming Slowdown in China. At a time when much of the world was convinced China would overtake the U.S., they argued that tailwinds were already turning into headwinds. Our guest on this episode of The Call is Mark Williams, Chief Asia Economist at Capital Economics, and co-author of the firm’s provocative report. We ask Williams to revisit his firm’s thesis today, se...
Show more...
Business
RSS
All content for The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk is the property of The U.S. Chamber of Commerce Global Intelligence Desk and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Seven years ago, economists at Capital Economics, an independent macro-economic consultancy, issued a paper entitled The Coming Slowdown in China. At a time when much of the world was convinced China would overtake the U.S., they argued that tailwinds were already turning into headwinds. Our guest on this episode of The Call is Mark Williams, Chief Asia Economist at Capital Economics, and co-author of the firm’s provocative report. We ask Williams to revisit his firm’s thesis today, se...
Show more...
Business
Episodes (20/54)
The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
How do we square China’s economic malaise with its industrial might?
Seven years ago, economists at Capital Economics, an independent macro-economic consultancy, issued a paper entitled The Coming Slowdown in China. At a time when much of the world was convinced China would overtake the U.S., they argued that tailwinds were already turning into headwinds. Our guest on this episode of The Call is Mark Williams, Chief Asia Economist at Capital Economics, and co-author of the firm’s provocative report. We ask Williams to revisit his firm’s thesis today, se...
Show more...
2 days ago
19 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
What is the U.S. Role in a Chaotic New Era?
Adam Posen, in the most recent issue of Foreign Affairs, published a stark argument that has generated buzz here in DC: The U.S., in his telling, has leveraged its role as a ‘global insurer’ underwriting the risks of the world’s economic system, to extract ever richer premiums from allies, demanding more and more as the price of U.S.-led security. At a time when the world was already undergoing significant changes, Posen joins the Call to raise significant questions about the role of t...
Show more...
1 week ago
21 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Is Innovation the New Battlefield?
From autonomous systems to AI-driven targeting, warfare is being redefined by innovation. This week’s guest, former Defense Under-Secretary Michèle Flournoy, argues that America’s ability to deter and win wars, now, depends less on troop strength and more on its capacity to out-innovate its rivals through cutting-edge research, skilled talent, and fast investment. She will outline how deterrence is shifting as defense innovation accelerates worldwide, and allies modernize their military -- an...
Show more...
3 weeks ago
19 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
What Will Shape the 'New Normal' U.S.-China Ties?
With the U.S. and Chinese leaders meeting on the sidelines of APEC this week, the stakes are high: renewed tariff threats, tighter tech and minerals controls, allies under pressure to align, and a security backdrop that refuses to stay quiet. Supply chains, investment plans, and boardroom risk maps all hang in the balance. The question on our mind this week: Can Trump and Xi Find a New Normal? The Chamber's own Charles Freeman joins The Call to explore what a “new normal” could look like: Wha...
Show more...
1 month ago
20 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Is Japan Ready for President Trump’s Asia Tour?
Japan has made history by electing Sanae Takaichi as its first female prime minister, but her Liberal Democratic Party was forced to shift rightward after centrists lost the premiership. Having just secured Japan’s top post, Takaichi has only days to prepare to meet with President Trump and will have to navigate a slew of difficult issues with a famously unpredictable U.S. leader. David Boling, former Hill staffer, USTR trade negotiator, and currently Director, Japan and Asian Tr...
Show more...
1 month ago
21 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Is America's Global Leadership at Risk?
As the dust of the IMF Annual Meetings settles, the world is now defined by uncertainty. The weaponization of trade, the steep price of resilience, and debt levels set to reach 100% of global GDP by 2030 – all combine for difficult terrain to navigate. This brings forward our question: Who leads in a fragmented world? Robert Zoellick, Chairman of Americas, at Temasek, Singapore’s Sovereign Wealth Fund, former President of the World Bank, U.S. Trade Represe...
Show more...
1 month ago
21 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Can the Global Economy Retain its Resilience? Live from IMF
Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas joins the Call live from the IMF meetings in Washington., which is happening amid surging public debt levels, growing trade restrictions, and technological advances that promise to reshape labor and productivity. - The Call is a series of live video conversations featuring expert guests from the U.S. Chamber's Global Intelligence Desk. Live access to The Call is a benefit to the Chamber’s members; however, we are pleased to provide recordings of the calls for wider ...
Show more...
1 month ago
21 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
What are the Risks of a Fragmented World?
Gita Gopinath joins The Call just days before the IMF Annual Meetings, at a moment when the question for governments and businesses alike is clear: Can the global economy grow in a fragmented world? With debt levels surging, trade disputes escalating, and AI transforming labor markets, the stakes for CEOs and policymakers have rarely been higher. - The Call is a series of live video conversations featuring expert guests from the U.S. Chamber's Global Intelligence Desk. Live access to The Cal...
Show more...
1 month ago
21 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Should Argentina scrap the peso and adopt the U.S. dollar?
Absolutely not, says this says this week’s guest. Mark Sobel, U.S. Chairman at OMFIF and former U.S. representative to the IMF, explained, “dollarization is not the answer. What Argentina needs is a flexible exchange rate, not a trap with no exit.” Sobel joins Jay Sapsford to explore why Argentina keeps stumbling into crisis, the risks of Washington’s latest bailout, and why the peso still matters for the country’s future. - The Call is a series of live video conversations featuring ex...
Show more...
1 month ago
17 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
What If The War in Ukraine Doesn't End?
The UN General Assembly is convening next week, for the fourth time since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine—and once again, the war will be high on the agenda. As the conflict nears its fourth year with no end in sight, the war is contributing to a global military build up, which reached a record $2.7 trillion in 2024, a surge not seen since the Cold War. John Lough, Head of Foreign Policy at the New Eurasian Strategies Centre, joins this week’s episode as the conflict extends into a grinding war ...
Show more...
2 months ago
18 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
The Fed’s Tightrope - Can It Revive Growth?
With markets bracing for the Fed’s rate decision today, former Cleveland Fed President & CEO Loretta Mester joins Jay Sapsford on this week’s episode to weigh the risks: insurance cuts vs. the danger of reigniting inflation. - The Call is a series of live video conversations featuring expert guests from the U.S. Chamber's Global Intelligence Desk. Live access to The Call is a benefit to the Chamber’s members; however, we are pleased to provide recordings of the calls for wider listening ...
Show more...
2 months ago
19 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Is Copper the Next Geopolitical Battleground?
Jeffrey Currie, Chief Strategy Officer of Carlyle’s Energy Pathways, joins the Call to unpack copper’s price whiplash, the coming U.S. tariffs, and why this ancient metal’s resurgence has become a heated subject matter in corporate boardrooms. Currie, widely known for calling copper the “new oil”, will explain its surging demand, driven by its growing role in semiconductors and EVs, in AI plans and data centers, electrical grids, and arms manufacturing. Meeting that demand won’t be easy. New ...
Show more...
3 months ago
20 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Can the U.S. Maintain a Chip Industry Edge?
John Neuffer, President & CEO of the Semiconductor Industry Association, joins host Jay Sapsford to provide the broad context of the cross-border tensions for perhaps the world’s most innovative sector, a $600 billion chips industry that supplies the brains embedded in everything from computers and cars to cell phones and refrigerators. - The Call is a series of live video conversations featuring expert guests from the U.S. Chamber's Global Intelligence Desk. Live access to The Call is a...
Show more...
4 months ago
18 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Can the Fed both fight inflation and stay independent?
The Fed is facing growing discontent among some – including the President – over Fed Chair Jay Powell’s failure to ease interest rates, as well as criticism from Congress over cost escalations in a Fed office renovation. Former CEO and President of the St. Louis Federal Reserve, James Bullard, and one of the earliest voices to warn of inflation risks joins the Call to discuss this tension. Currently the Dean of the Mitch Daniels School of Business at Purdue University, Bullard took over the r...
Show more...
4 months ago
20 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Will U.S.-Japan Security Ties Survive the Tariff Test?
President Trump’s threat to impose a 25% tariff on Japanese auto imports has jolted the U.S.–Japan alliance days ahead of Japan’s July 20 upper-house elections. Despite repeated rounds of negotiations, a deal remains elusive, raising questions about the future of one of the world’s most important bilateral security relationships between Tokyo and Washington. This week’s guest, Dr. William Chou, a seasoned Japan analyst, unpacks how trade tensions are shaping political dynamics in Tokyo,...
Show more...
4 months ago
22 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Why the G20 is Crucial to U.S. Global Leadership
The U.S. will assume the presidency of the G20 in December, presenting a unique moment next year for Washington to demonstrate global leadership by hosting perhaps the most important multilateral forum, the G20’s annual summit. It is also a moment of consequence for the U.S. Chamber, as it convenes the B20 ahead of the G20 summit, providing the business community an opportunity to help shape the G20 agenda. Our guest, Dr. Leslie Vinjamuri, argues the summit is an opportunity for the U....
Show more...
4 months ago
20 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Is China Coming For The Dollar?
The U.S. dollar reigns supreme, but its role as the default global currency is increasingly under scrutiny. In his new book, Our Dollar, Your Problem, today's guest Ken Rogoff argues the greenback’s primacy might erode faster than expected. The biggest challenge might not be the status of the dollar as a reserve currency, but as the preferred unit of global exchange. Some of the U.S.’ biggest rivals, Rogoff argues, are increasingly uncomfortable with the U.S. controlling the rails of global f...
Show more...
4 months ago
18 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
As Middle East Tensions Escalate, The Oil Market Shrugs
After U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites, many expected oil prices to soar. But they didn’t. Why? This week’s guest, Daniel Yergin, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Prize and Vice Chairman of S&P Global, joins Jay Sapsford to explain how U.S. shale reshaped the oil market, and why America still defends flows it no longer relies on. - The Call is a series of live video conversations featuring expert guests from the U.S. Chamber's Global Intelligence Desk. Live access to The Call is...
Show more...
5 months ago
18 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
The Future of Submarine Warfare: is AUKUS at risk?
The Pentagon is reviewing plans for the joint provision of nuclear submarines to Australia, a deal seen as the pillar of the trilateral security partnership between Australia, the U.K., and the U.S., or “AUKUS.” The review has sparked alarm in both Canberra and London and raises hard questions about U.S. shipbuilding capacity, defense readiness, and Washington’s long-term vision for deterrence in the Indo-Pacific. Former Deputy Secretary of State Dr. Kurt Campbell, a driving force behin...
Show more...
5 months ago
20 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Does ASEAN Have to Choose Sides in the U.S.-China Trade War?
Southeast Asia is stuck in the middle; caught between Washington’s push to address Chinese trade practices and Beijing’s growing economic clout. This week’s guest, John Goyer, VP for Southeast Asia & Oceania at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce,has recently returned from a tour across the region—and joined this week’s episode to unpack how governments are navigating the pressure. - The Call is a series of live video conversations featuring expert guests from the U.S. Chamber's Global Intellig...
Show more...
5 months ago
20 minutes

The Call by the Global Intelligence Desk
Seven years ago, economists at Capital Economics, an independent macro-economic consultancy, issued a paper entitled The Coming Slowdown in China. At a time when much of the world was convinced China would overtake the U.S., they argued that tailwinds were already turning into headwinds. Our guest on this episode of The Call is Mark Williams, Chief Asia Economist at Capital Economics, and co-author of the firm’s provocative report. We ask Williams to revisit his firm’s thesis today, se...