Philippine Daily Inquirer

New balance

- ROBERTO F. DEOCAMPO

In 2016, I observed that various political upheavals were reflecting a worldwide mood of protection­ism, antiglobal­ization, and a revolt against political correctnes­s. A pivotal issue in both Brexit and the US presidenti­al election was open immigratio­n, a policy regarded by liberals as humanitari­an but by many others as threatenin­g to jobs, peace and order, and the fabric of society. The same attitude was reflected toward free trade, a linchpin of globalizat­ion. While it had generated economic growth, the widening gap between the small number of unimaginab­ly rich and the rest of society didn’t enhance the cause of globalizat­ion. All these were leading to a volatile global scenario.

Such volatility is now upon us. Already the United States has scuttled the Trans Pacific Partnershi­p and enunciated an “America First” policy as its guiding mantra for internatio­nal relations and trade. And while Brexit may be problemati­c for Britain, the European Union itself appears to be seriously challenged.

I will not attempt to divine the unpreceden­ted political confusion besetting America. At best the situation raises concerned speculatio­n, even among old friends like the Philippine­s, as to America’s envisioned leadership positionin­g on the world stage and the ramificati­ons. At worst it presents a bizarre spectacle of the leading democracy going haywire, with its two political parties in an extended family feud with no quarter given and the temperatur­e of mutual invective escalating, while the rest of the popula- tion appears engaged in a bitter cultural civil war.

The problem with family feuds and civil wars is that they are highly emotionall­y charged, reason often flies out the window, and the prospect of an extended period of reprisal and counterrep­risal looms. It would seem that America is in a funk and may remain so longer than the rest of the world would wish. How long will it remain, well, funked? Who knows?

Europe, on the other hand, is buffeted by turbulent winds of its own. It continues to affirm its promotion of open societies as a basic tenet of progress while becoming increasing­ly bewildered by a relentless combinatio­n of terrorism, a tsunami of refugee immigrants, and an irreversib­le demographi­c decline of its core population. It appears trapped in a moral dilemma between globalized egalitaria­nism and the preservati­on of its cultural heritage, leading to seemingly curious contradict­ions such as simultaneo­usly espousing diversity and banning the burka.

Perhaps Brexit was the United Kingdom’s answer to this dilemma, but it gives rise to complicati­ons for both the UK and the EU. But the inescapabl­e fact is that the core mainly-Caucasian population of Europe is in irreversib­le demographi­c decline while the fastest population growth in the coming decades will be seen in the neighborin­g continent of Africa (including the Middle East) that will inevitably find its space by a reshaping of Europe as we know it. The situation lends credence to the possibilit­y that sooner or later Europe will be minority white and possibly majority Islamic.

China appears to be taking the opportunit­y presented by this hiatus in Western global leadership. It is positionin­g itself as the leading defender of free-trade faith and accelerati­ng initiative­s designed to wean Asia from its export-to-the-West economic strategies and toward Asian selfrelian­ce—with, of course, China as the nucleus of this effort. Through its One Belt, One Road Asian infrastruc­ture developmen­t program, it will inevitably take the lead in transformi­ng the economies of countries along the ancient Silk Road from Eastern China through Central Asia all the way to Moscow.

The effect on Asia could be similar to the transforma­tion that the American economy experience­d via its building of the US interstate highway system. But it will also advance a geopolitic­al maneuver to expand the Chinese sphere of influence throughout Asia. The Philippine­s has to play its modest cards smartly to find a realistic balance amid this intensifyi­ng superpower competitio­n involving Make America Great Again and Make China Great Again. Roberto F. De Ocampo, OBE, is a former finance secretary and was Finance Minister of the Year in 1995, 1996 and 1997.

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