Sparks fly: workers produce steel at a small plant in Shenyang, northeast China.
EPA/MARK
Politicians in Europe, the US and the UK have blamed steel industry woes on artificially cheap imports.
Brexit means Brexit.
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With the UK government in disarray, the type of Brexit that Britain faces is again open to question.
The southern African region can benefit from beneficiating produce like sugar.
REUTERS/Mujahid Safodien
The Southern African Development Community (SADC) roadmap towards greater regional trade integration and development is a good start but lacks detail.
Ugandan worker picking tea as exports in the country grows.
Reuters/James Akena
Uganda needs to boost manufacturing and exports to realise the ambitions listed in its social and economic development plan.
The government should focus more on supporting whole towns, rather than propping up certain industries like car manufacturing.
GM Hotel/AAP
The side effects of globalisation that have led to our current populist politics will not be successfully addressed by old-style industry policy.
Australian Manuka honey may have to be called something else.
Tookapic
New Zealand is currently pushing to certify and protect Manuka honey. Should Australia follow suit with King Island Beef?
US President Donald Trump arrives at the Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport in Rome.
Remo Casilli/Reuters
European leaders are still trying to decipher Trump’s thinking on NATO, Europe and many other issues.
Surveys suggest Trump’s election is hurting America’s reputation.
AP Photo/Kamil Zihnioglu
Surveys show Trump’s election is damaging America’s reputation abroad, which research suggests could deal a sharp blow to US trade.
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, sitting at the president’s right, announced the China trade deal.
Carolyn Kaster/AP Photo
The Trump administration’s new deal with China, which won’t benefit many workers, shows the pitfalls of pursuing bilateral agreements at the expense of multilateral ones like NAFTA.
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Oxfam’s efforts to find solutions to the world’s inequalities are welcome but its wrongful use of “human economy” and repackaging it as a concept from high up might do more harm than good.
A mariachi band performs during a protest against U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposed border wall, in Monterrey, Mexico.
REUTERS/Daniel Becerril
Can the U.S. recover its once positive image among Mexicans? Trade, immigration and cultural ties stand to suffer.
GrahamAndDairne/Flickr
Smaller companies are failing to move quickly into overseas sales. It may be time for government to put its money where its mouth is.
Africa needs to improve governance, build infrastructure, and reduce trade barriers to achieve inclusive growth.
REUTERS/Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
The need to connect African markets to aid development will once again be discussed at the World Economic Forum. The debate needs to move beyond the usual rhetoric.
Is Trump a populist, conventional conservative or something else entirely?
Andrew Harnik/AP Photo
A flurry of policy reversals in recent weeks suggests Trump has changed his tune from his populist campaign promises. Has he?
China ‘s foreign direct investments and acquisitions have grown tremendously worldwide.
Edgar Su /Reuters
China is now the world’s second-largest international investor. Should the US and Europe be scared?
Just speaking English isn’t going to cut it anymore.
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The importance of speaking other languages in a post-Brexit world.
A lot is riding on the first head-to-head meeting between Trump and Xi.
AP Photo
Nothing less than the fate of the global economy lies in the balance as the two strong-willed leaders sit down for their first one-on-one meeting.
Manufacturing is expanding around the world
Julian Smith/AAP
There’s good news from manufacturers around the world, and this should feed into economic growth.
Uncertain ground ahead.
EPA/How Hwee Young/Pool
With Britain’s exit from the EU, China is losing a champion on similar trade and investment issues.
European Council President Donald Tusk holds Theresa May’s Brexit letter.
REUTERS/Yves Herman
Trump’s agenda to pull America from key global alliances is more evidence that suggests it is. A law professor probes the unknown of what a world without such cooperation might look like.