
Kemal Derviş
@kemal_dervis
Senior Fellow @BrookingsGlobal. Formerly: Head of @UNDP, Turkish Economics Minister. Official Twitter Handle.
ID: 1620860514
http://www.brookings.edu/experts/dervisk 25-07-2013 17:26:43
208 Tweet
24,24K Followers
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My latest commentary for Project Syndicate was just published. Read it at the link below, and get a 50% discount on a PS subscription, which includes unlimited access to my past (and future) commentaries, as well as much more high-quality content. prosyn.org/8xm4Gpy?referr…

Most developing countries eventually could be better off with green technologies, say Kemal Derviş and Sebastian Strauss of Brookings Global. But they typically lack the long-term finance that would allow them to realize these future benefits. bit.ly/3pohDJy

Is decarbonization impossible or inevitable? In my latest commentary for Project Syndicate with Sebastian Strauss, we argue the answer is 'both' prosyn.org/LshQAel?referr…

My latest commentary for Project Syndicate was just published. Read it at the link below, and get a 50% discount on a PS subscription, which includes unlimited access to my past (and future) commentaries, as well as much more high-quality content. prosyn.org/vVlwzpL?referr…

My latest commentary with Sebastian Strauss was just published on Project Syndicate. Read it at the link below: prosyn.org/qqCrvM8?referr…

The future growth trajectories of emerging markets and developing economies could determine whether the world limits global warming to well below 2°C, argue Kemal Derviş and Sebastian Strauss of Brookings Global. bit.ly/3ic4Fgo

There is less and less justification for a carbon-pricing approach that regards developing countries as a single category regardless of their income levels, argues Kemal Derviş of Brookings Global. bit.ly/3CEziEQ

The EU’s border taxes, the IMF’s differentiated price floors, and prospects for global consensus at COP26. I discuss carbon pricing in my latest for Project Syndicate prosyn.org/Z1h3K1h

.President Donald J. Trump Joe Biden's planned Summit for Democracy in December will face the key difficulty for values-based multilateralism: who exactly should be present? says Kemal Derviş of Brookings Global. bit.ly/3l4qH6f


Values-based multilateralism is both easier and more difficult than multilateralism based on interests, argues Kemal Derviş of Brookings Global. bit.ly/38REGGK

The #USMCA offers the most expansive environment and labor commitments of any American trade agreement. Joshua Paul Meltzer of Brookings Global outlines how the US-Mexico-Canada agreement positions the US to lead on climate change and workers' rights. brook.gs/3yLnAVD


The increasing imminence of the climate threat means that frontloading mitigation efforts to reach net-zero emissions is crucial, argues Kemal Derviş of Brookings Global. bit.ly/30upO0l

As the EU debates its choices and priorities in an increasingly dangerous world, it should embrace two global challenges, argues Kemal Derviş of Brookings Global. bit.ly/3llmNqJ


Even as they proclaim the superiority of autocratic governance, illiberal democrats depend on electoral victories for their legitimacy, writes Kemal Derviş. bit.ly/3Hyc5pq


Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has exposed many grave weaknesses in the international order – not least the United Nations Security Council and its role in supposedly overseeing the multilateral system, argue Kemal Derviş and Jose Antonio Ocampo. bit.ly/3to3Sic

The crisis in Ukraine exposes again the need for change at the UN Security Council. Jose Antonio Ocampo and I make the case for urgent reform in a new article up now at Project Syndicate:project-syndicate.org/commentary/ukr…