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New Atlanticist

Apr 15, 2020

Sanitizing supply chains can jumpstart coronavirus-ridden transatlantic economy

By Barbara C. Matthews

Transatlantic policymakers must urgently find new ways to address this deepening crisis at the core of the interdependent economy that delivers economic growth and jobs. This requires finding ways right now to reactivate supply chains and increase confidence in supply chain control processes throughout this crisis.

European Union International Markets

New Atlanticist

Mar 12, 2020

Explainer: What Trump’s Europe coronavirus travel ban means

By Atlantic Council

US President Donald J. Trump’s surprise March 11 announcement barring most travel from Europe to the United States for thirty days starting March 13 rattled stock markets and sent travelers scrambling to make new arrangements. We look in more detail at the implications of the US president’s announcement.

Economy & Business European Union

New Atlanticist

Jan 27, 2020

The potential global impact of the coronavirus outbreak

By David A. Wemer

Beijing “must act" to contain the coronavirus outbreak, Miyeon Oh says, "especially in light of the indirect but potentially massive economic, social, and political impacts of the coronavirus in the region and around the world.” There is growing concern in Beijing as well, Robert A. Manning added, “that if this pandemic is only in its early stages, it could become the straw that broke the camel’s back for an already anemic economy.”

China Coronavirus

Barbara C. Matthews is a nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council’s GeoEconomics Center. She is a globally recognized public-policy and quantitative-finance leader. She is also the founder and chief executive officer of BCMstrategy, Inc., a data company that uses patented language technology to help portfolio managers and advocates measure public-policy volatility and anticipate public-policy trajectories.

In government, Matthews had the honor to serve as the first US Treasury attaché to the European Union (Senate-confirmed diplomatic rank: minister-counselor). As such, she was the most senior US Treasury official in Europe at the start of the Great Financial Crisis. She also served as senior counsel to the US House of Representatives Financial Services Committee under the leadership of Chairman Michael G. Oxley. In the private sector, she founded and ran a successful policy-consulting business during the Great Financial Crisis. She was also the lead global strategist and advocate for the Institute of International Finance, Inc. in the 1990s and early 2000s, during which she worked directly with global bank chief executive officers, chief risk officers, their teams, and their counterparts in the world’s leading central banks and financial regulators.

She holds a political science degree from Georgetown University and two law degrees (JD with honors and LLM in comparative and international law) from Duke University Law School. A member of the Bretton Woods Committee and the Council on Foreign Relations, she is also a faculty/mentor at the Maxwell School’s National Security Strategies program at Syracuse University. She and her husband reside in the Commonwealth of Virginia; they have one daughter who is in college.