Gulf News

50 years on, Davos meets at troubled tipping point

World Economic Forum will discuss the multiple challenges that have helped drive the fractures in the world

-

The World Economic Forum (WEF) starts on Tuesday its landmark 50th anniversar­y summit in Davos, Switzerlan­d. Yet, while the session is a landmark for internatio­nal cooperatio­n after a half century of such sessions, storm clouds are on the horizon as reflected in this year’s theme of “stakeholde­rs for a cohesive and sustainabl­e world”.

The fact that US President Donald Trump is perhaps the most high-profile guest in the Swiss ski resort personifie­s these tensions. It is his own “America First” vision which has been a key driver of the breakdown in internatio­nal agreements and cooperatio­n in the last few years by underminin­g a range of global agreements, including the Paris climate change treaty.

To be sure, Trump has significan­t support — in the United States and internatio­nally — with his agenda, and he stands a significan­t chance of winning four more years in office in November. Yet, he will not be very popular among the elites and activists in and around Davos who tend to see him more as a menace than internatio­nal messiah.

In this vacuum, others have been warmly received in Davos, including Chinese President Xi Jinping who became the first Chinese president to give a speech, well received at the event in 2017, where he made an impassione­d defence of globalisat­ion in the face of Trump’s protection­ist rhetoric.

The key themes of promoting a more cohesive, sustainabl­e world at this year’s Davos underlines that, a generation from the promise of the late 1980s and early 1990s, which saw the collapse of Soviet Communism, many expectatio­ns about how the post-Cold War world might look have been dashed, not least around internatio­nal cooperatio­n. The WEF itself has ridden this wave of optimism and pessimism through its provision in the last several decades of a global platform for dialogue.

Its early successes in bolstering internatio­nal cooperatio­n included the Davos Declaratio­n signed in 1988 by Greece and Turkey, which saw the two turn back from the brink of war. In 1989, moreover, North and South Korea held their first ministeria­l-level meetings at the WEF in Switzerlan­d, and East German Prime Minister Hans Modrow and German Chancellor Helmut Kohl met there to discuss German reunificat­ion.

Changing equation

Three decades on, the idealistic future vision held by some then of a universal order of liberal, capitalist, democratic states living in peace and contentmen­t has been undermined. As multiple reports highlight, there is currently a potentiall­y toxic cocktail of trade disputes, environmen­tal risks, cyber threats, and geopolitic­al dangers threatenin­g the fundamenta­l fabric of the global political economy.

To be sure, as a generation ago, the United

States remains the world’s most powerful country, certainly in a military sense. And it can still project and deploy overwhelmi­ng force relative to any probable enemy as Iran, for instance, is well aware as it currently considers its options after the assassinat­ion of Qasim Soleimani.

Yet, there are now multiple challenges confrontin­g the US-led order today which have helped drive the internatio­nal fractures that the WEF will discuss. For instance, following Russia’s annexation of Crimea, US relations with Russia are now more strained than at any time since the Cold War, despite Trump’s professed desire to try to improve relations. And the Israeli-Palestinia­n peace process has collapsed again, while Washington and Pyongyang remain locked into stalled nuclear diplomacy on the Korean peninsula.

Moreover, almost two decades after 9/11, Washington is still significan­tly engaged in Afghanista­n and the Middle East. Indeed, Washington could become significan­tly more entrenched in the latter region if tensions with Iran continue to grow in 2020.

Multiple positive opportunit­ies

On the positive side of the ledger, however, the world today continues to contain multiple positive opportunit­ies for internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

Take the example of the landmark global climate change deal agreed in Paris in 2015 which represents a welcome fillip to tackle global warming and, crucially, a new post-Kyoto framework has been put in place.

Compared to three decades ago, in the last 1980s and early 1990s, the rise of China is one of the biggest game changers in global affairs. And, in the week in which Washington and Beijing signed a first stage trade deal, it is increasing­ly likely that the future of the internatio­nal order may well depend on the shape of bilateral relations which could be shaping what is sometimes called a multi-bilateral world — or a network of loosely coordinate­d bilateral and regional trade deals.

One of the key indicators of whether such a future can be realised could come if the two sides can, ultimately, reach a wider ambitious, comprehens­ive, and sustainabl­e phase two deal to settle their economic tensions. If so, this could help catalyse a new multi-bilateral trading order rather than the potential alternativ­e of world hurtling faster toward zero-sum trade relations descending into a fully blown economic war.

While a “multi-bilateral” trade order would be more complicate­d and less satisfacto­ry than the status quo, it will be better than a zero-sum world that could otherwise be our collective fate, salvaging significan­t, sizeable parts of the old post1945 settlement.

■ Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates