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Davos lessons Trump's return heralds new era of harsh global competition
The Guardian Weekly
|January 31, 2025
In the heady mountain air of Davos last week, away from the parties and the backslapping tech bros, another, more beleaguered crew touted their wares: the multilateralists.

On the sidelines of the World Economic Forum, representatives of aid agencies, development banks and multilateral lenders grabbed a moment with the many world leaders present, vying for attention among the glitz.
But at a summit dominated by the second coming of Donald Trump, and where the overwhelming concentration of power in the hands of a few giant corporations was blatant, theirs seemed like voices from another age.
Trump's arrival in the White House cements a shift that began even before his first term: away from the march of globalisation, towards a more fragmented world. Russia, once welcomed into what became the G8, is promulgating a war in Europe, its economy now walled up behind sanctions; China and the US are vying for geopolitical dominance.
As the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, put it: "We have entered a new era of harsh geostrategic competition." Adapting themselves to Trump's transactional, zero-sum worldview, global leaders ditched any appeal to high-flown ideas, and rattled out negotiating points.
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