Montreal Gazette

Coming year feels ripe for ‘crisis’: Eurasia Group

- ENDA CURRAN

This year could see a geopolitic­al crisis on the scale of the financial crash a decade ago, Eurasia Group warned in its annual outlook.

Describing global political challenges as “daunting,” the New York-based political risk consultanc­y said that “if we had to pick one year for a big unexpected crisis — the geopolitic­al equivalent of the 2008 financial meltdown — it feels like 2018.” The biggest uncertaint­y surrounds China’s move to fill a vacuum as U.S. influence continues to decline, stoking tensions between the two powers, it said. That’s likely to affect economics as well.

“We see a much greater fragmentat­ion of the global marketplac­e because government­s are becoming more interventi­onist,” Eurasia President Ian Bremmer said in a Bloomberg Television interview with Tom Keene and Francine Lacqua. “Part of that is because the Chinese have an alternativ­e model for their investment­s and they’re increasing­ly going to be seen as the most important driver of other economies around the world who will align themselves more with Beijing than with Washington.”

Here’s are some of Eurasia’s biggest worries in 2018:

CHINA

President Xi Jinping’s successful consolidat­ion of authority is helping him to fill the gap created by U.S. President Donald Trump’s move away from Washington-led multilater­alism. In areas such as trade and investment, technology and values, China is setting internatio­nal standards with less resistance than ever before.

“For most of the West, China is not an appealing substitute,” Eurasia said. “But for most everybody else, it is a plausible alternativ­e. And with Xi ready and willing to offer that alternativ­e and extend China’s influence, that’s the world’s biggest risk this year.”

MISCALCULA­TIONS

There are too many places where a misstep or misjudgmen­t could provoke serious internatio­nal conflict. Cyberattac­ks, North Korea, Syria, Russia and terrorism are some of the risks that could trigger a mistake that leads to confrontat­ion. “We aren’t on the brink of World War III,” Eurasia said. “But absent a global security underwrite­r, and with a proliferat­ion of subnationa­l and non-state actors capable of destabiliz­ing action, the world is a more dangerous place.”

TECHNOLOGY COLD WAR

As technologi­cal developmen­ts reshape the economic and political order, the process will be messy. Fault lines include a struggle for market dominance, fragmentat­ion and a race for new technologi­es.

“As our cars, homes, factories, and public infrastruc­ture begin to generate mountains of data, and as connectivi­ty morphs into augmented reality, a new generation of humans will be ‘on the grid’ around the clock, with important implicatio­ns for society and geopolitic­s,” Eurasia said. “But until we get there, it’s the world’s biggest fight over economic power.”

IRAN

Relations between the U.S. and Iran in 2018 will be a source of broad geopolitic­al and market risk. If the nuclear deal doesn’t survive the year, the Middle East could be pushed into a real crisis.

“Trump has it in for Iran,” Eurasia said. “Rightly or wrongly, he sees the country as the root of much evil in the world.”

PROTECTION­ISM

Protection­ism will make further inroads led by populism, state capitalism and heightened geopolitic­al tensions. Government­s are also intervenin­g in the digital economy and innovation-intensive industries to preserve intellectu­al property and related technologi­es.

“The rise of anti-establishm­ent movements in developed markets has forced (in some cases, enabled) policy-makers to shift toward a more mercantili­st approach to global economic competitio­n and to look as if they’re doing something about lost jobs,” Eurasia said. “Walls are going up.”

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