ECFR's German Council Members include:
Roland Berger - Founder and Chairman, Roland
Berger Strategy Consultants GmbH
Franziska Brantner - Member of the European Parliament
Daniel Cohn-Bendit - Member of the European Parliament
Gerhard Cromme - Chairman of the Supervisory Board
of ThyssenKrupp
Hans Eichel - former Finance Minister
Joschka Fischer - former Foreign Minister and
vice-Chancellor
Karl-Theodor zuGuttenberg -
former Minister of Defence
Annette Heuser - Executive Director, Bertelsmann
Foundation Washington DC
Wolfgang Ischinger - Chairman, Munich Security Conference
 |
Gerald Knaus on Turkish foreign policy seen from Istanbul, February 2011 . |
Gerald Knaus - Chairman, European Stability
Initiative and Open Society Fellow
Caio Koch-Weser - Vice Chairman, Deutsche Bank
Group; former State Secretary
Alexander GrafLambsdorff -
MEP & Vice-Chair, Group of the Alliance of
Liberals and Democrats in Europe
Hildegard Müller - Chairwoman of the Management
Board, BDEW Bundesverband der Energie- und Wasserwirtschaft
Wolfgang Münchau - President, Eurointelligence ASBL
Cem Özdemir - Leader, Bündnis90/Die Grünen
(Green Party)
Ruprecht Polenz - MP and Chairman of the Bundestag
Foreign Affairs Committee
Norbert Roettgen - Federal Minister for Environment,
Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety
Klaus Scharioth - Dean of the Mercator Fellowship
on International Affairs; former Ambassador of Germany to the US
Michael Stürmer - Chief Correspondent, Die Welt
The
global financial crisis has implications that go far beyond the
financial and economic sectors. Below are nine thoughts in an attempt
to see the opportunities in what currently looks like a pretty grim
picture.
Andre
Wilkens is the director of the Open Society Institute Brussels
(OSI-Brussels)
and a founding member of the European Council on Foreign Relations
(ECFR) Thought
1: The west is in trouble and has become a potential source of
instability for the world Πηγή

When
George Soros invests $50 million to revolutionize the way Americans
think about a certain issue, it would normally be deemed newsworthy.
Not so with the formation of the Institute for New Economic Thinking
(INET). Three months after a summit in New York state last July,
Soros pledged $50 million
to INET, which promises “to promote changes in economic theory and
practice” by “providing the proper guidance” to “the next generation.”
Despite its name, its philosophy is nearly a century old. The group
blames the economic crisis on free market capitalism and promotes a
return to the theories of John Maynard Keynes. INET hosted its inaugural
conference April 8-10 at King’s College, Keynes’ school, and
called on economists to “apply the same Keynesian courage and innovation” to ending the worldwide recession
Andre Wilkens - Director Mercator Centre Berlin and Director
Strategy, Stiftung Mercator
Πηγή
http://www.ecfr.eu/
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