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NewsletterFrom possible breakdown to desirable breakthrough | Thinking about Europe 2020 | Trebuie sa intelegem ca ratele de crestere economica din anii trecuti au fost umflate | Fondurile UE: este necesara o redefinire a misiunii lor | Article: "Blush, but not too deeply" | Dealing with a clash of capitalisms | Capitalism vs capitalism in the 21st century | Article: "What this financial crisis teaches us" | Better regulation- a must for financial markets | If they are too big to fail, then split them up | The danger of overregulation is overblown | Financial markets can not guvern us | Article: "Capitalism’s future" | The Calculation Debate revisited | Capitalism's uncertain future | Purging the toxins | Article: More than a financial crisis | Keynes, not Marx, is back | The limits of openness | The one-corner solution | Making financial systems add up (1) |
Daniel Daianu writes in the Romanian media (Ziarul Financiar-www.zf.ro, Jurnalul National-www.jurnalul.ro, Piata Financiara-www.piatafinanciara.ro, Nine O'clock-www.nineoclock.ro) on economic and European issues on a regular basis. Mr Daianu is also often a guest of TV and Radio shows with economic focus.
Article published in the journal "Europe's World"
What will the world economy look like 25 years from now? Daniel Daianu says that capitalism's future will be dominated by the struggle between liberal capitalism and the authoritarian one.
By Daniel Daianu, 13 June 2008, European Voice
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The failings of the rating agencies in evaluating synthetic financial products and the rising opacity of financial markets have reminded me a famous debate in economic thought. The calculation debate took place among several leading economists during the interwar period, in the last century
15 September 2008, New Europe
The rise of Sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) looks likely to have an increasingly significant impact on international politics. Some of the SWFs belong to countries that had since World War II been ideologically opposed to the western world. It’s therefore possible to place the SWF phenomenon in a broader context of global competition and of diverging national interests.
Find here the article in New Europe
FOCUS ON
The CEU Press and Center for EU Enlargement Studies organized on Monday, May 25, the book launch of "Which way goes capitalism?" by Daniel Dăianu

Daniel Daianu launched his book “Southeast Europe and the world we live in” on the 15th of April 2008.