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TradeWorld

Mar 9, 2021

Transatlantic trade: Tectonic shifts ahead for 2021

By Barbara C. Matthews

The Biden-Harris administration has signaled an intention to hit the ground running with the March 2 release of the president’s 2021 Trade Policy Agenda alongside the 2020 Annual Report. However, trade tensions loom on the horizon. How can the US and EU work together to address digital and data policy issues and the growing economic influence of China?

Digital Policy European Union

New Atlanticist

Dec 22, 2020

The global economy in 2020, by the numbers

By GeoEconomics Center

The pandemic has made this a historic year for the global economy, now beset by a recession the likes of which we haven’t seen since the Great Depression. To make sense of it all, our GeoEconomics staff and senior fellows have selected the numbers behind the headlines, organized around our three pillars of work, that best capture the global economy’s journey in 2020—and what lies in store for 2021.

Economy & Business Future of Work

Report

Dec 14, 2020

Trade policy priorities for a COVID-19 era and beyond

By Barbara C. Matthews

Transatlantic trade policy stands at a crossroads as 2020 draws to a close. Challenged by populists across the political spectrum, disrupted by COVID-19, and potentially rendered irrelevant by the distributed digital economy, it is fair to question whether the multilateral trading framework crafted at the tail end of World War II is fit for the […]

Economy & Business Eurozone

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.