Taliban 2.0: Afghanistan on the Brink (US AWOL) – GZERO Media

Ian Bremmer, president of Eurasia Group, our parent company, has opened this years GZERO Summit with a provocative speech on the near future of international politics. Here are the highlights.

Are the United States and China now locked in a new form of Cold War? Their governments behave as if they are.

But Bremmer isnt buying it. Hes not predicting that Washington and Beijing will become more cooperative with one another, but that both will be too preoccupied with historic challenges at home in coming years to wage a full-time international struggle.

In Washington, the main worry will be for Americas broken political system. US politics is becoming even more tribalized as TV and online media target politically like-minded consumers with hyperpartisan news coverage. Widening wealth inequality fuels the fire by separating white and non-white, urban and rural, and the more educated from the less educated. Deepening public mistrust of political institutions will fuel future fights over the legitimacy of US elections.

Beijings burden centers on how to extend decades of economic gains while moving away from a growth model that no longer works, as higher wages in China and more automation in factories elsewhere cut deeply into Chinas manufacturing advantages. China is still a middle-income country. To reach the prosperity level of wealthy nations, it needs 6-7 percent growth for another 20 years.

But China must spend less in coming years to keep giant, deeply indebted companies afloat and more to care for the largest population of elderly people in history. And its leaders must accomplish this at a time when Chinas people expect ever-rising levels of prosperity from their government.

The domestic distraction of US and Chinese leaders will create new opportunities for European, Japanese, Canadian, Indian and other political and business leaders to contribute toward international problem-solving. But other governments arent the only new players stepping into this power vacuum.

Technology companies are fast becoming important geopolitical actors. Were entering a world in which economic winners and losers, election outcomes, and national security will depend on choices made by both governments and by the worlds big tech firms.

Bremmer calls this a techno-polar moment.

The idea is simple but transformative: Just as governments make the laws that determine what can happen in the physical world, tech companies have final authority in a digital world thats becoming both more expansive and more immersive.

The biggest tech companies will establish sovereignty by defining the digital space and its boundaries, the algorithms that determine what happens within that space, and the terms and conditions that decide who gets to operate in this world.

For skeptics, Bremmer poses this question: Who will do more to influence the outcome of next years US midterm congressional elections: The President of the United States or the CEO of Meta? According to Bremmer, since the vote will be influenced by both real-world rules changes and the online flow of information, the answer isnt obvious.

How will tech companies try to expand their power? Some will behave as globalists by trying to reach consumers and influence politics everywhere.

Others will act as national champions by aligning with individual governments and their goals.

Still, others will behave as techno-utopians, companies that expect historical forces and tech innovations to help them replace governments in important ways.

The relative success of these models over the next decade will decide how government and tech companies share power over the longer-term and whether democracy or autocracy will have the upper hand.

Whats to be done? Think adaptation, not surrender, says Bremmer. Steps can be taken to limit the sometimes negative influence of tech companies in the political lives of democracies. But just as climate change can be limited but not avoided, so we must understand and adapt to a world in which governments and tech companies compete for influence over our lives.

See more here:
Taliban 2.0: Afghanistan on the Brink (US AWOL) - GZERO Media

Related Posts

Comments are closed.