PRESSESPIEGEL/Zinsen, Konjunktur, Kapitalmärkte, Branchen
Die wirtschaftsrelevanten Themen aus den Medien, zusammengestellt von Dow Jones Newswires.
GLOBALISIERUNG - Die deutsche Wirtschaft will ihre globale Ausrichtung trotz der Erfahrungen aus der Corona-Pandemie beibehalten. Das zeigt eine Umfrage des Münchener Ifo-Instituts im Auftrag der Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung, die dem Handelsblatt vorliegt. In den vergangenen Monaten hatten Ökonomen intensiv darüber diskutiert, ob die Pandemie zu einer Deglobalisierung führen würde. Das ist offenbar nicht der Fall. Nur eine Minderheit der befragten Unternehmen plant laut Ifo-Institut überhaupt, ihre internationale Beschaffungsstrategie anzupassen. Und kaum ein Unternehmen erwägt, Produktionsstätten nach Deutschland zurückzuholen. (Handelsblatt)
and there s not much recourse that britain has when we are desperate post brexit for some kind of a trade deal that the white house will likely be negotiating. it s a bad precedent in terms of the independence of diplomats and it doesn t look good for the state of politics for the british/american relationship. it s also bad because darroch said privately, was trying to say privately what every ambassador i ve spoken to from all across the world has said about donald trump. so speaking of boris johnson, is he in line to be the next british prime minister? it s hard to see that he won t be, joe. i mean, our political people here in washington in london are saying that barring something extraordinary, boris johnson will be britain s next prime minister. he gets to be chosen by conservative party members, that s a very small group of people amongst whom he is
impressive. what is the state of the british/american relationship. is there the trust between the two countries? between their security services that there once was? i know many british officials, former officials worry that donald trump represents a tone of break in politics. tells the brits who he favors for the next prime minister, for example. those are unusual things. you know, i think trump needs a win. he s been going from difficulty to difficulty. we ll see if he gets the appearance of one in britain. but i d be surprised. i m going to pick up right there where david ignatius is leaving off. i mean, is it possible for this president to come away with something that resembles a diplomatic win in this visit? as richard haass pointed out, the timing is a little tricky. the timing is very tricky. donald trump couldn t have chosen a better country. right now the brits are in the
very relatable, when you think about it. he s got trump s number. now, i don t know how much he s gotten out of the relationship so far, because they still have some differences, especially on how to deal with north korea. but trump s never attacked him, certainly. and there are a lot of trade issues that trump important trade imbalances in the japanese/american relationship. trump has always been gentle in dealing with that issue. so abe was the first one to sort of, you know, write this sort of roadmap open hon how a foreign leader can co-opt trump. he s got a trip that s mostly about golf, having a good time, and showing off the president, putting him in a good light, all things that trump wants to do. not a trip where there s a lot that either said has said there s going to be big substantive policy breakthroughs. it seems like a vacation.