The New Asian Order
And How the United States Fits In
FEBRUARY 2, 2015
In
November 2012, I found myself at the Trident Hotel in Mumbai—one of a
tiny handful of Americans attending a forum, sponsored by prominent
Indian and Chinese business organizations, on Asian financial
integration.
There
is something a bit unsettling about being nearly the only American at a
discussion of financial order held not on the Potomac, East, Hudson, or
Thames, but near the banks of the Mithi River. And surely there is
something deeply symbolic about a forlorn group of Americans listening
to power brokers from China, India, Japan, and elsewhere discuss how to
remake the financial order on a pan-Asian basis. After all, the United
States has dominated global finance in the postwar era, which is a
byproduct of the unique role of the U.S. dollar, the United States’
weight in global institutions, and the best-in-class status of so many
U.S. financial services firms, among other factors. http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/142843/evan-a-feigenbaum/the-new-asian-order
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