Global economic resilience persists despite significant geopolitical instability, including ongoing conflicts and shifting trade policies. Martin Wolf, chief economics commentator at the Financial Times, argues that the world economy’s inherent robustness allows it to absorb shocks that historically would have triggered severe downturns. Europe, however, faces a precarious future, struggling with deep-seated fragmentation and a diminishing reliance on the United States as a predictable security guarantor. The current US administration’s foreign policy, characterized by unpredictability and a lack of coherent strategy, exacerbates these tensions, leaving European nations in a state of moral and intellectual confusion. Furthermore, the rapid advancement of artificial intelligence presents a "Faustian bargain," offering immense potential while simultaneously introducing existential risks that current political institutions are fundamentally unprepared to manage or regulate effectively.
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