Economics Program and Scholl Chair in International Business
The CSIS Economics Program and Scholl Chair in International Business focuses on international economic issues and how they impact U.S. competitiveness and economic security. Key areas of focus will include trade policy, supply chain resilience, investment policy, international finance, commercial diplomacy, and new economic alliances.
Established in 1981, the Scholl Chair examines the relationship of international trade and investment to economic growth, innovation, and development. In a time of accelerating global integration and financial instability, America’s role on the world stage is influenced by its ability to effectively integrate trade and international economic objectives into its broader foreign policy.
Contact Information
- Evan Brown
- Program Coordinator and Research Assistant, Economics Program and Scholl Chair in International Business
- ebrown@csis.org
Media Queries
- H. Andrew Schwartz
- Chief Communications Officer
- 202.775.3242
- aschwartz@csis.org
- Samuel Cestari
- Media Relations Coordinator, External Relations
- 202.775.7317
- scestari@csis.org
Recent Reports
Silicon Island: Assessing Taiwan’s Importance to U.S. Economic Growth and Security
Brief by William Alan Reinsch and Jack Whitney — January 10, 2025
Revenue Implications of Tax Cut and Jobs Act Provisions in 2025
Report by Sanam Rasool, William Alan Reinsch, and Thibault Denamiel — December 19, 2024
Building Digital Public Infrastructure: Lessons Learned from Kazakhstan
Report by Kati Suominen — November 27, 2024
Immigration Policy Solutions to Shortages in Critical Sectors of the U.S. Economy
Brief by Thibault Denamiel, William Alan Reinsch, Jason Schenker, and Dhari Al-Saleh — November 25, 2024
The Double-Edged Sword of Semiconductor Export Controls: Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment
Report by William Alan Reinsch, Jack Whitney, and Matthew Schleich — November 19, 2024
Recent Analysis
Things Are Not Always What We Are Told: Lessons from the First Tariff War
Commentary by William Alan Reinsch — January 13, 2025
Valedictory—or Obituary?
Commentary by William Alan Reinsch — January 6, 2025
Not So Fast: Why U.S. Manufacturing Is Likely to Stay Home Through Decarbonization
Commentary by Elaine Buckberg — January 3, 2025
Securing the AGI Laurel: Export Controls, the Compute Gap, and China’s Counterstrategy
Commentary by Barath Harithas — December 20, 2024
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All Economics Program and Scholl Chair in International Business Content
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Silicon Island: Assessing Taiwan’s Importance to U.S. Economic Growth and Security
Brief by William Alan Reinsch and Jack Whitney — January 10, 2025
Revenue Implications of Tax Cut and Jobs Act Provisions in 2025
Report by Sanam Rasool, William Alan Reinsch, and Thibault Denamiel — December 19, 2024
Building Digital Public Infrastructure: Lessons Learned from Kazakhstan
Report by Kati Suominen — November 27, 2024
Immigration Policy Solutions to Shortages in Critical Sectors of the U.S. Economy
Brief by Thibault Denamiel, William Alan Reinsch, Jason Schenker, and Dhari Al-Saleh — November 25, 2024
The Double-Edged Sword of Semiconductor Export Controls: Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment
Report by William Alan Reinsch, Jack Whitney, and Matthew Schleich — November 19, 2024
Staying Ahead in the Global Technology Race: A Roadmap for Economic Security
Digital Report by The CSIS Economic Security and Technology Department — October 29, 2024
Trusted Chips: Why the Discussion Risks Distracting from Solving Policy Issues
Report by Andreas Schumacher — October 24, 2024
The Transatlantic Trade and Climate Space after the U.S. 2024 Elections
Report by Thibault Denamiel and William Alan Reinsch — October 21, 2024
The Double-Edged Sword of Semiconductor Export Controls
Report by Jack Whitney, Matthew Schleich, and William Alan Reinsch — October 4, 2024
Crafting a Robust U.S. Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism
Brief by Sanam Rasool, William Alan Reinsch, and Thibault Denamiel — August 8, 2024