Reforming Global Economic Governance for the 21st Century
from International Institutions and Global Governance Program
from International Institutions and Global Governance Program

Reforming Global Economic Governance for the 21st Century

Mike Blake/ Reuters

Global economic governance has demonstrated remarkable resilience in the face of multiple shocks. Yet its failure to confront challenges like climate change risks further disorder.

Originally published at Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

August 1, 2024 5:26 pm (EST)

Mike Blake/ Reuters
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Despite a concatenation of shocks—a China shock in trade, the global (or North Atlantic) financial crisis, surges in migration, a global pandemic—the current architecture of global economic governance has persisted and demonstrated remarkable resilience and adaptability. Trade has not collapsed; financial integration recovered from the global financial crisis; the cross-border movement of people has resumed post-pandemic. The interwar decades of disintegration, nationalist isolation, and great power war have yet to be replicated. Rather than “deglobalization” or the collapse of the existing global order, institutions and integration appear to have reached a stable plateau. Nevertheless, this plateau risks further descent into disorder, albeit less from a concerted attack on that order than out of discontent with its failure to confront such urgent challenges as climate change effectively. Conflict over the current distribution of costs and benefits poses another threat to the status quo. 

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