Ian Bremmer

Ian Bremmer

President of Eurasia Group and Author of “The Power of Crisis”

A middle-aged man with glasses and gray hair, wearing a blue shirt, speaks while gesturing with his hands against a plain background.

Ian Bremmer is the president and founder of Eurasia Group, the global research firm. He is a foreign affairs columnist and editor at large for Time magazine and teaches at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs.

Bremmer is credited with bringing the craft of political risk to financial markets. He created Wall Street’s first global political risk index (GPRI) and established political risk as an academic discipline. His definition of emerging markets — “those countries where politics matter at least as much as economics for market outcomes” — has become an industry standard. G-zero, his term for a global power vacuum in which no country is willing and able to set the international agenda, is widely accepted by policymakers and thought leaders.

Bremmer has published eleven books including The New York Times best seller Us vs Them: The Failure of Globalism, which examines the rise of populism across the world. His most recent book is The Power of Crisis: How Three Threats — and Our Response — Will Change the World. He appears regularly on Fox, CNN, MSNBC, and other networks.

Bremmer earned a Ph.D. in political science from Stanford University in 1994 and was the youngest-ever national fellow at the Hoover Institution. In 2007, he was named a young global leader of the World Economic Forum. He is the Harold J. Newman Distinguished Fellow in Geopolitics at the Asia Society Policy Institute and serves on the president’s council of the Near East Foundation, the leadership council for Concordia, and the board of trustees of Intelligence Squared.

Bremmer established Eurasia Group with just $25,000 in 1998. Today, the company has offices in New York, Washington, San Francisco, London, Brasilia, Sao Paulo, Singapore, and Tokyo, as well as a network of experts and resources in 90 countries.

4 min
Ian Bremmer calls Hillary Clinton a "moneyball" candidate for president.
2 min
We're six months away from the Iowa Caucus, so there's plenty of time for other Republican candidates to clarify views, but so far only Marco Rubio and Rand Paul have proven themselves articulate and knowledgeable on foreign policy.
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"The United States does not know what it stands for," explains political scientist Ian Bremmer, author of a new book about the American imperative to define foreign policy values.
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The global risk expert explains the three crucial things you must know if you plan to invest in the developing world.
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The global risk expert explains how the Saudi royal family is like the Vatican.
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Mubarak is gone, but the military is still there and will remain the most powerful player in that country for a long time.