Session 3, July 21 - IN PERSON - The Economic Challenge: Is There a Win-Win Outcome?

Session 3, July 21 - IN PERSON - The Economic Challenge: Is There a Win-Win Outcome?

Single Ticket SLS | This course is completed

51 North Park Street Lebanon, NH 03766 United States

Lower Level

7/21/2023 (one day)

9:00 AM-11:30 AM EDT on Fri

$35.00

Please note that this registration is for the in person attendance option. By registering here you will receive a ticket for admission to the Lebanon Opera House, which you can collect on the morning of the lecture from the Osher at Dartmouth WILL CALL table (which will be located in the lobby of the Opera House).

Series presented in conjunction with the John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding.

Speakers:
Marc Chandler
Jennifer Lind


Moderator: Shehzad Qazi


NOTE: Mr. Ping Huang was originally scheduled to participate in this session, but unfortunately had to cancel his appearance. We hope to announce another speaker very soon.

 


One of the most widely respected and quoted currency experts, Marc Chandler has been analyzing and advising on the global capital markets for more than 30 years. As a keen observer of the interconnection of international politics and economics, Marc appears frequently in the financial press - CNBC, CNBC Asia FOX Business, Bloomberg TV, and Radio. His essays have been published in Foreign Affairs, Barron’s, The Financial Times, The Washington Post, and the Nation. He taught for 20 years at New York University’s Center for Global Affairs and given guest lectures at numerous other schools, including Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia, the Gabelli School of Business at Fordham, and the School of International and Public Affairs at Colombia University.

 

He is the author of two books, Making Sense of the Dollar (2009) and Political Economy of Tomorrow (2017). The first won a Bronze Award from Independent Publishers. It focuses on the foreign exchange market and the role of the dollar and finds a key to its enduring role in the capital markets not market for goods. The second is in some ways a re-tell of the King Midas myth, seeing the greatest weakness of capitalism emanating from its greater strength: generating surpluses that are choking it figuratively and literally.

 

Throughout his career on Wall Street, Chandler has advised private businesses, hedge funds and asset managers on navigating the foreign exchange market, and in 2018, joined Bannockburn Global Forex as Managing Director and Chief Market Strategist in their New York City office.

Jennifer Lind is an associate professor in the Department of Government at Dartmouth, and an expert in East Asian international relations. Professor Lind has recently authored a book manuscript (under review) about authoritarian adaptation and China’s economic and technological rise. She is also the author of Sorry States: Apologies in International Politics (Cornell University Press, 2008). Lind has published numerous scholarly articles about issues related to East Asia, and writes for wider audiences in outlets such as Foreign Affairs and the New York Times. She has been quoted and interviewed by PBS Newshour, National Public Radio, Washington Post, Financial Times, and The Wall Street Journal. Lind is affiliated with the Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies at Harvard University, as well as Chatham House, London. In recent years she has been a visiting scholar at Waseda University, Japan, and at the School for Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London. Lind has worked as a consultant for RAND and for the Office of the Secretary, U.S. Department of Defense.

  • This session is sponsored by Mascoma Bank.