experts
Uri Dadush
Senior Associate, International Economics Program

about


Uri Dadush is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment.

Uri Dadush was a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He focuses on trends in the global economy and is currently also tracking developments in the eurozone crisis. 

Dadush is interested in the impact of the rise of developing countries for financial flows, trade and migration, and the associated economic policy and governance questions. He is the co-author of four recent books and reports:  Inequality in America: Facts, Trends and International Perspective (Brookings, 2012), Juggernaut: How Emerging Markets Are Reshaping Globalization (Carnegie, 2011), Currency Wars (Carnegie, 2011), and Paradigm Lost: The Euro in Crisis (Carnegie, 2010). He has published over a dozen Carnegie papers and policy briefs as well as numerous journal articles.

Before joining Carnegie, Dadush’s experience was split evenly between the public and private sector, where he led a number of business-turnaround situations. 

In the private sector, he was president and CEO of the Economist Intelligence Unit and Business International, part of the Economist Group (1986–1992); group vice president, international, for Data Resources, Inc. (1982–1986), now Global Insight; and a consultant with McKinsey and Company in Europe.

In the public sector, he served as the World Bank’s director of international trade and director of economic policy. He also served concurrently as the director of the bank’s world economy group, leading the preparation of the World Bank’s flagship reports on the international economy for over eleven years.


areas of expertise
education
PhD, Business Economics, Harvard University, MA, Economics, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, BA, Economics and International Relations, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
languages
English, French, Hebrew, Italian

All work from Uri Dadush

filters
322 Results
In the Media
The Economic Implications of the Brexit Mess

The referendum in favor of the exit of Britain from the European Union represents a victory of nationalism over the liberal economic order, in the country that inspired the ideas that lie at its foundations.

· June 27, 2016
OCP Policy Center
commentary
TPP, the NAFTA Countries, and the Integration of the Americas

There is a large unfinished agenda in the integration of the North American economy, a gap which TPP could help fill.

· June 16, 2016
Wilson Center
commentary
The Unmet Challenge of Interdependence in the EU-MENA Space: A View From the South

Dealing with the challenge of interdependence between the EU and the Arab World will not, on its own, solve the two regions’ growth dilemmas—but it will help.

  • +1
  • Uri Dadush
  • Karim El Aynaoui
  • Karim El Mokri
  • Rim Berahab
· May 25, 2016
OCP Policy Center
commentary
The Economic Impact of Forced Migration

Forced migration flows which are mismanaged create large negative political and economic externalities for the world as a whole.

· April 22, 2016
OCP Policy Center
In the Media
On Voters’ Economic Priorities in Elections

American voters are more concerned about economic issues in the 2016 presidential election.

· March 15, 2016
CCTV
event
Prospects for Low Income Developing Countries
February 18, 2016

Min Zhu discussed the IMF's new study on Low Income Developing Countries, economic consequences of the outlook, and the policy options available.

  • +3
commentary
Industrial Policy: A Guide for the Perplexed

Industrial policy is a controversial, even taboo, subject in policy circles. Yet it is widely practiced by advanced and developing countries alike.

· February 1, 2016
OCP Policy Center
In the Media
How Will the Fed’s Rate Hike Affect Latin America?

The Federal Reserve’s rate hike is unlikely to be a cause of major disruption in Latin America this time around.

· January 11, 2016
Latin America Advisor
In the Media
The Truth About Trade

A breakdown of trade multilateralism, and a failure to widen the reach of regional trade deals, will signal the beginning of a more dangerous era of world history

· November 18, 2015
Foreign Affairs
event
Japan and U.S. Perspectives on Southeast Asia Development
October 30, 2015

Seventy years after World War II, Southeast Asia stands at a crossroads amid multilateral trade negotiations, economic integration initiatives, political turmoil, and the establishment of new development institutions and regional governance frameworks.

  • +6