Episodes

  • Charles H. Dallara is an American banker and the former managing director of the Institute of International Finance, which is a group representing the global financial services industry.

    He served as the managing director of the Institute of International Finance, Inc. from 1993 to 2013, leading it in its prominent role during the European sovereign debt crisis, including the private sector involvement (PSI) agreement reached between European countries and financial organisations on the one hand and the Greek government on the other, "the biggest sovereign restructuring in history."

    Before that, he acted as managing director at J.P. Morgan & Co. from June 1991 to July 1993, and he also held various positions in the George H. W. Bush and Ronald Reagan administrations: Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Policy Development and Senior Advisor for Policy to the Secretary of the Treasury (1988-1989); U.S. Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund(1984-1989), and concurrently as Senior Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Economic Policy (1985-1988); Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Monetary Affairs (1983-1985); and U.S. Alternate Executive Director at the IMF (1982-1983).

    Currently, he is an Advisory Partner of Partners Group and Chairman of Partners Group Board of Directors, USA.

    He is the author of a newly published book, titled "Euroshock. How the Largest Debt Restructuring in History Helped Save Greece and Preserve the Eurozone" (March 2024)

    In this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor ⁠Pieter Cleppe⁠ discusses the following topics with him:

    - How sustainable is the Eurozone? Will Eurozone democracies be able to withstand future shocks in case of fiscal transfers and fiscal adjustment programmes?

    - Are there similarities between indebted Western democracies today and 1980s rate hikes, which also troubled Latin American countries at the time?

    - What are the chances of Argentina’s President Milei succeeding?

    - Does bitcoin have a future?

  • Daniel Kral is a Senior Economist within the macroeconomics forecasting division of Oxford Economics. He joined Oxford Economics in April 2021 in London and leads the coverage of the Nordic region. Daniel holds a Master of Research from University College London where his thesis won the Frank Carter prize for the best post-graduate thesis in 2014. Before, he worked at IHS Markit, VEON, RS Consulting and at the Brussels office of British EU affairs think tank Open Europe.

    On Twitter/X, he is one of the most prominent analysts monitoring the developments of European economies.

    In this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor ⁠Pieter Cleppe⁠ discusses the following topics with him:

    - Germany's deindustrialisation: how serious is it?

    - The Eurozone: trouble on the horizon? Can higherinterest bring down monetary union?

    - What about Europe's growth poles. There is Poland, but are there others?

    - The economic impact of Brexit, looking back

    https://twitter.com/DanielKral1/status/1745399662431924249

    https://twitter.com/DanielKral1/status/1745855091674956166

    https://twitter.com/brussels_report/status/1415636769530388486

  • Missing episodes?

    Click here to refresh the feed.

  • Mohamed Magdy Farid (Arabic: محمد مجدي فريد, born 18 August 1982) is an Egyptian Classic Liberal politician. He has been a Senator since 2020. He holds a bachelor's degree in industrial and management engineering from October 6 University, and a master's degree in Sustainable development Planning with a specialization in Economic Development from the Egyptian National Planning Institute. He was a founding member of the Free Egyptians Party but sits now as an independent.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor ⁠Pieter Cleppe⁠ discusses the following topics:

    The war in Gaza and the implications for the relationship between Israel and Egypt Elections, democracy and the rule of law in Egypt The state of the economy of Egypt and the role of the IMF The impact of the EU’s new “CBAM” climate tariff on the economy of Egypt Cooperation between Egypt and the EU on migration and the possibility of a deal to outsource EU asylum processing to Egypt

    https://twitter.com/Mohamed_M_Farid/status/1736298296652583393

  • M'backé N'diaye holds a degree in law and politicalscience from Cheikh Anta Diop University in Dakar, Senegal. He is a specialist in the Sahel region. His work thereby focuses on geopolitics, the history of religions and the Sahel region. He is also a political communications consultant.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor ⁠Pieter Cleppe⁠ discusses the following topics:

    - The background of the crisis and civil war inDarfur

    - Why do there seem to be double standards withregards to the media coverage for this conflict versus other conficts, and political attention for it in Europe and internationally?

    - The importance of the Sahel region and Islamistterrorism for Europe

    - What can the EU and the United States do? Whatcould the African Union do?

    - What’s the role of Russia and China?

    https://twitter.com/philippe_dam/status/1726895169197261277

    https://twitter.com/brussels_report/status/1726938248604516788

  • Brad Lips is thechief executive officer of AtlasNetwork, a US non-profit that provides training, networking and grants forlibertarian, free-market, and conservative groups around the world. It aims tosecure for all individuals the rights to economic and personal freedom, throughits global network of strategic partners.

    Atlas Network wasfounded in 1981 by Sir Antony Fisher, a British entrepreneur, who wasinfluenced by economist F.A. Hayek and his book, The Road to Serfdom.

    On its website, itnotesthat “Atlas Network partners in Europe are skeptical of the illiberal right andthe socialist left. Ours is a practical agenda:

    - Torestore economic competitiveness in Europe by removing burdensome regulations;

    - Torebuild trust in liberal institutions by reining in the scope of theirauthority; and

    - Toliberate individuals across the continent to use their talents within the kindof “system of natural liberty” that Adam Smith recognized as conducive toincreasing the wealth of nations.

    In recent months we created the UkraineFreedom Fund to address special challenges in this war-torn country, and in2023 we launched a Competitiveness Reform Hub through which our Europeanpartners can collaborate and draw inspiration in meeting the acute economicchallenges of this decade. These activities complement long-running AtlasNetwork activities in Europe, including the annual Europe Liberty Forum, theTransatlantic Think Tank CEO Summit, and the EuropeLiberty Award.”

    In this this episode ofthe Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor ⁠Pieter Cleppe⁠ discusses the following topics:

    - The differencesbetween the U.S. and European policy debate

    - Challenges toraise funds in various part of the world

    - How to definethe "liberty movement"?

    - What's the useof party political action and parapolitics? What to tell those that have givingup hope and focus on their private life or their business?

    - How can theliberty movement better coordinate and exploit opportunities?

    https://twitter.com/brussels_report/status/1676241378710364161

    https://twitter.com/bradlips/status/1686822619071320064

    https://twitter.com/AtlasNetwork/status/1692622415606522053

  • Christopher Snowdon is the head of Lifestyle Economics at the Institute of Economic Affairs. His research focuses on lifestyle freedoms, prohibition and policy-based evidence. He is a regular contributor to the Spectator, Telegraph and Spiked and often appears on TV and radio discussing social and economic issues.

    Snowdon’s work encompasses a diverse range of topics including ‘sin taxes’, state funding of charities, happiness economics, ‘public health’ regulation, gambling and the black market. Recent publications include‘Drinking, Fast and Slow’, ‘The Proof of the Pudding: Denmark’s Fat TaxFiasco’, ‘A Safer Bet’, and ‘You Had One Job’. He is also the author of‘Killjoys’ (2017), ‘Selfishness, Greed and Capitalism’ (2015), ‘The Art ofSuppression’ (2011), ‘The Spirit Level Delusion’ (2010), ‘Velvet Glove, IronFist’ (2009).

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the Nanny State Index (NSI), which is authored by Snowdon, along with partners across Europe.

    This is a league table of the worst places in Europe to eat, drink, smoke and vape. The initiative was launched in March 2016 and has been a media hit right across Europe.

    https://twitter.com/epicenterEU/status/1663806883218505728

    https://twitter.com/iealondon/status/1684593206518845440

    https://twitter.com/cjsnowdon/status/1684635014691008513

  • Rod Richardson is a philanthropist who serves as the President of the Grace Richardson Fund (GRF), which is the leading private foundation pioneering free market climate policy. He is also co-founder/co-chair of the Climate & Freedom International Coalition Meeting, co-facilitated in collaboration with Americans for Tax Reform Foundation/Tholos Foundation.

    GRF pioneers new free market solutions to emerging 21st century challenges. Their free market climate policy consists of a set of new proposals rooted in theobservation that the key solution for climate change, poverty and the evils that follow, is one and the same thing: more freedom, noting that “all the tools in the free market toolbox — free trade, competition, property rights, supply side tax policy, democracy, and rule of law, etc. — can be combined in novel ways to powerfully accelerate not only the innovation and deployment of ever cleaner solutions, but the expansion of freedom itself — and with that, the eradication of global poverty. As a hybrid private foundation / think tank, GRF follows a strategy of collaborative policy innovation. It convenes scores of fellow think tanks and hundreds of scholars and experts, to brainstorm and develop new freedom-expanding solutions to the pressing problems of our time.”

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the following topics with him:

    - Why taxing carbon and the punitive approach to deal with climate change is simply not working

    - What could be an alternative, more functional approach?

    - The role of the non-Western world in the context of climate policies

    - Nuclear power and liberalisation of energy markets

  • Martin Kinnunen is a Member of the Swedish Parliament (SD-ECR). He has been a Member of the Riksdag since 2014, elected for the Stockholm constituency since 2018. Before, he was elected for the Gothenburg constituency. He is a member of both the EU Committee and the Environment and Agriculture affairs Committee, and serves as the climate and environmental policy spokesperson for his party.

    Kinnunen has been press secretary for the Sweden Democrats in 2010–2014 and also served as Chairman of Sweden Democratic Youth between 2005 and 2007. Kinnunen is a trained economist (PhD) and has completed a bachelor of philosophy degree in economics at Stockholm University.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the following topics with him:

    - The EU's energy crisis: how did it came so far and are EU member states on the right path?

    - The EU's green deal and ever more expensive climate policies: is the Swedish EU Council Presidency putting the brakes on?

    - Is there a chance to put a stop to EU legislative plans to ban the combustion engine?

    - The latest on the European Union's protectionist response to the American "Inflation Reduction Act"

    https://twitter.com/brussels_report/status/1502312339688894470

    https://twitter.com/altingetmiljo/status/1627922819454734336

    https://twitter.com/Martin_Kinnunen/status/1613638903193378840

  • Dalibor Rohac, originally from Slovakia, is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), where he studies European political and economic trends, specifically Central and Eastern Europe, the European Union (EU) and the eurozone, US-EU relations, and the post-Communist transitions and backsliding of countries in the former Soviet bloc.

    He is concurrently a research associate at the Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies in Brussels and a fellow at Anglo-American University in Prague.

    Before joining AEI, Dr. Rohac was affiliated with the Cato Institute’s Center for Global Liberty and Prosperity, the Max Beloff Centre at the University of Buckingham, the London-based Legatum Institute, and the Center for the New Europe in Brussels.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the following topics with him:

    - Dalibor Rohac's latest book, entitled “Governing the EU in an Age of Division”.

    - The eurozone and the risks resulting from higher interest rates

    - The interest in Europe amongst D.C. policy wonks, beyond pure defense issues

    - The political situation, rule of law and the economic situation in Slovakia and Central Europe

    Dalibor Rohac recently wrote this comment for Brussels Report as well as the following insightful articles for The Spectator and AEI.

    Previously, he authored “In Defense of Globalism” (Rowman and Littlefield, 2019). His previous book, “Towards an Imperfect Union: A Conservative Case for the EU” (Rowman and Littlefield, 2016), was included on Foreign Affairs magazine’s list of best books of 2016. Dr. Rohac has testified before the House Foreign Affairs Committee and has briefed the US Helsinki Commission. His commentary has been published widely in the popular media, including in the Financial Times, Foreign Affairs, Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post. His scholarly articles have been featured in policy journals, including Constitutional Political Economy, Journal of Institutional Economics, Kyklos, and Public Choice.

    He has a PhD in political economy from King’s College London; an MPhil in economics from St Antony’s College, University of Oxford; an MA in economics from George Mason University; and a BA in economics from Charles University in Prague.

    https://twitter.com/brussels_report/status/1610945251853598725

    https://twitter.com/spectator/status/1631352628180393985

    https://twitter.com/AEIfdp/status/1631731165160935424

  • Elena Leontjeva is the co-founder and President of the Lithuanian Free Market Institute (LMFI). She founded the influential Lithuanian think tank in 1990.

    She holds degrees in economics, mathematics and programming and has directed research and policy advocacy at the Institute, whilst playing a key role in her country’s transition. Ms. Leontjeva was named by magazine Veidas among the ten personalities who have changed Lithuania. She has contributed to the reforms in the Banking system, introduction of the Currency Board and the Litas Credibility Law, building the legal foundations for the Securities Market and the Stock Exchange, Deregulation, Tax and budget reform as well as the introduction of Private Pension Insurance. She has published widely in the press and has also dedicated herself to writing fiction.

    Ms Leontjeva has served as a State Councillor on economic reform in six consecutive administrations, and in 1998-9 has been chief economic advisor to Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus. She has also served on official bodies engaged in the transition from the Soviet system, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Sunset Commission, etc.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the following topics with her:

    - What's the key reason we are facing inflation right now? Energy problems, monetary policy, the fall-out of Covid lockdowns, or something else?

    - What should the ECB be doing?

    - What if strong anti-inflation action by the ECB leads to a breakup of the Eurozone?

    - The economic situation and free market reform in Lithuania and the Baltics

  • Daniel J. Mitchell is a public policy economist based in Washington D.C. For years, he has been extensively commenting fiscal and budgetary policy in the OECD, having served as a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute and the Heritage Foundation, as an economist for Senator Bob Packwood and at the Senate Finance Committee, and as a Director of Tax and Budget Policy at Citizens for a Sound Economy. He is also the founder of the Center for Freedom and Prosperity and often comments on fiscal and economic policy on his blog.

    This podcast is an audio record of a Brussels Report seminarrecently hosted in Brussels, in cooperation with the Tholos Foundation, where Daniel J. Mitchell discussed the state of public finances in the Eurozone, exploring the following questions. This against a background of European governments engaging in yet another round of budgetary expansion as a response to the energy crisis, after stretching their fiscal capacity to deal with the consequences of Covid lockdowns, all amidst increasing interest rates and with a monetary union with only shaky political underpinning.

    - How bad is the situation really for Eurozone governments?

    - Could this ultimately once again threaten the monetary union?

    - Which fiscal and economic policies can governments pursue to stimulate economic growth to alleviate debt levels?

    - Which Eurozone member states are mostly in trouble?

    His presentation can be downloaded here.

    https://twitter.com/danieljmitchell/status/1586415034296852480

    More from Dan:

    https://twitter.com/danieljmitchell/status/1585954003287883777

    https://twitter.com/brussels_report/status/1582324987523842048

    https://twitter.com/danieljmitchell/status/1603074157771628546

    https://twitter.com/danieljmitchell/status/1602653705454723074

    https://twitter.com/danieljmitchell/status/1599084162438533121

    https://twitter.com/danieljmitchell/status/1596214446661472257

    https://twitter.com/danieljmitchell/status/1587147703493984259

  • Dr. Björn Peters is a German physicist and energy economist. He is also an investor into the newest generation of nuclear power plants, as co-founder and CFO of Dual Fluid Energy. He heads the research and consulting institute Peters Coll, which he founded, and advises entrepreneurs and politicians. On a voluntary basis, he is a founding member of the Nuclear Pride Coalition as well as a member of the federal board and head of the energy policy department at the economically liberal think tank “Deutscher Arbeitgeberverband e.V.” (German Employers‘ Association), where he is responsible for the energy policy column „The Energy Question“.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the following topics with him:

    - What is the cause of the energy crisis?

    - The German debate on extending nuclear power plants

    - What to expect from the new generation of nuclear power plants, as for example small modular reactors (SMRs)?

    - How to assess the EU's response to the crisis, in particular the proposals for price regulation?

    - Can shale exploration in Europe offer solutions?

    - Are energy blackouts to be expected in Europe?

  • Ronald-Peter (Ronnie) Stöferle is an Austrian Managing Partner and Fund manager at Incrementum AG, based in the Principality of Liechtenstein. The company focusses on asset management and wealth management and is one hundred percent owned by its partners. Ronald manages a fund that invests based on the principles of the Austrian School of Economics.

    He is the Author of the annual In Gold We Trust-report, one of the most comprehensive gold studies worldwide, published since 2014 and read all over the world. The title of this year’s report, published in May, is “Stagflation 2.0”.

    Before becoming partner at Incrementum, he worked in the research department of Vienna-based Erste Group, where he started writing about gold in 2006. He gained media attention after forecasting that the price of gold would rise to USD 2,300/ounce at a time when the price was only at USD 500.

    In 2014, he co-authored a book on investing based on the Austrian School of Economics. The English version of the book “Austrian School for Investors – Austrian Investing between Inflation and Deflation” was published in fall 2015.

    ***

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the following topics with him:

    – The “In Gold we Trust” report

    – To what extent can inflation be blamed on Central Banks and to what extent on the energy crisis, the war and the Covid lockdown fall-out?

    – Should we expect material interest rate hikes by the ECB, given how this may cause the break-up of the common European currency?

    – The expectation for silver prices, assuming energy prices will remain high, which seems to be a troubling aspect of silver mining

    – Should ordinary savers put a percentage of their wealth in crypto? Or should they play it safe and stick with gold?

    – How risky is it to invest in government bonds, even assuming interest rates may rise in the next 10 years globally?

  • In this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the tense relationship between the EU and Iran with two eminent experts on the topic:

    Rebecca Schönenbach, CEO of Veto! For the Rule of Law and expert in extremism and terrorist financing (Part I of the podcast)

    and

    Kambiz Ghafouri, Director KGM Media, journalist and expert on Iran domestic and foreign policy (Part II of the podcast)

    The following topics are being discussed:

    - Are we close to a new Iran deal? What are the pitfalls? Are there any upsides?

    - Are Iran and Russia rivals or are they full-fledged allies? How should the EU and the West position themselves against this?

    - What should be EU policy towards Iran?

    - Is Russia already using Iran to circumvent the sanctions? Will this increase after a deal with Iran?

  • Matthias Bauer is a German economist and Director at European Centre for International Political Economy (ECIPE), a think tank based in Brussels dedicated to supporting free trade. He works on EU and global trade policy with a focus on digital and technology policymaking.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the following topics with him:

    - How to assess the two new import EU legislative initiatives to regulate the digital sector, the Digital Markets Act (DMA) and the Digital Services Act (DSA)? Will these foster innovation, or, on the contrary, constitute an extra contribution to Europe losing competitiveness?

    - The concept of “Strategic Autonomy” and the future of globalization. Is there a danger of the West decoupling from the rest of the world?

    - The OECD’s Pillar I (redistributing corporate tax income) and II (minimum tax rates) initiatives

    - What to think of the Western sanctions against Russia?

    - The proposed EU external Climate tariff CBAM: will it effectively function as EU protectionism? This is a topic often covered by ECIPE.

    - Lobbying in the Brussels bubble: Is it normal that green and other groups funded by the European Commission also lobby that institution? A question also raised in a 2019 paperauthored by Bauer.

  • Charlie Weimers is a Swedish MEP (ECR-SD), elected to the European Parliament since 2019.

    He serves at the European Parliament Committee on Foreign Affairs and is is a substitute member of the European Parliament Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs and the Delegation to the U.S. He is the co-chair of the European Conservatives and Reformists Migration Working Group.

    Before he moved to SD, he has served as the chairman of the Swedish Young Christian Democrats between 2008 and 2011.

    In the 2021 Brussels Report Ranking of MEPs, Weimers came second. He has been regularly publishing comment pieces on Brussels Report, amongst others supporting the migration policies of the Danish government.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the following topics with him:

    - The Conference on the Future of Europe (CoFoE). How did it all go so wrong and why does it lack legitimacy?

    - Migration policy and the EU Commission: is there any hope for change?

    - EU funding to Islamofascist groups: is attention for this problem increasing?

    - The upcoming Swedish election: What to expect?

  • Dr. Stephanie Daher is a researcher at the European Foundation for Democracy, where she specializes in researching radicalisation and extremism in EU Member States as well as in MENA countries, with a particular focus on prisons. She has also studied disinformation. She has worked as a research consultant with several European institutions and holds a PhD in Political Science and International Relations from the Sant’Anna Advanced School of Studies in Italy, where she specialised in contentious politics and protest movements in the Middle East and North Africa. She also has an MA in World Politics and International Relations from the University of Pavia (Italy) and a Masters Degree in Law from the Lebanese University.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the topic of disinformation by Russia and China, why it matters for young Europeans and what to do to increase awareness among them.

  • Michiel Hoogeveen is a Dutch Member of European Parliament (JA21-ECR) He started his career in the financial sector and as a freelance North Korea researcher, visiting the country multiple times. In 2019, he was elected to the States of South Holland, and in April2021, he became an MEP.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the following topics with him:

    - The Conference on the Future of Europe and the ECR’ stance here

    - Inflation and the policies of the European Central Bank

    - Migration policy: What can the EU change here?

    - The course of the EU. Is thorough reform still possible?

  • Hermann Tertsch is a Spanish Member of European Parliament (ECR – Vox), elected in 2019. Before that, he worked as a journalist for about 40 years, amongst others for Spanish press agency EFE, center-left newspaper El País, conservative newspaper ABC, Telemadrid and Radio Nacional de España.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eueditor Pieter Cleppediscusses the following topics with him:

    - The ECR's decision to walk out from the Conference on the Future of Europe

    - What's the best way to get the EU back on the path of a vehicle to open up trade?

    - What to think of the EU financing arms transfers to Ukraine?

    - The current political situation in Spain, including the Catalan quest for more autonomy

  • Danish investor Jeppe Kirk Bonde is the most copied investor on eToro, a leading investment platform with 27 million users, which enables investors to copy traders automatically. Currently, 25,000 people copythis portfolio, for an amount of more than $73 million.

    Notably, he has recorded an annual average return of more than 30 percent since 2013, an extraordinary performance, also comparedwith the likes of Benjamin Graham (21% average annual return between 1936 and 1955), Peter Lynch (an average annual 29% between 1977 and 1990) and Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (about 15 % per annum on average since 1990), as also recorded by a Brussels Report article on stock investing.

    In this this episode of the Brussels Report podcast, BrusselsReport.eu editor Pieter Cleppe discusses the following topics with him:

    - Is buying stocks a good way for people to defend their savings against inflation and ECB monetary debasement? What’s the ideal strategy to follow and how much of their savings should people invest into stocks?

    - What about gold as a means to protect one’s savings? And gold mines?

    - Is this the right time to invest in commodities, like oil, coal and gas, and is it wise to base investment decisions on news events?

    - How should investors deal with the development of ever more difficult trade with Russia and China?

    - Are we nearing the end of the great growth cycle in tech or is there much progress ahead, for example with AI?