Leaders | Slowbalisation

The steam has gone out of globalisation

A new pattern of world commerce is becoming clearer—as are its costs

WHEN AMERICA took a protectionist turn two years ago, it provoked dark warnings about the miseries of the 1930s. Today those ominous predictions look misplaced. Yes, China is slowing. And, yes, Western firms exposed to China, such as Apple, have been clobbered. But in 2018 global growth was decent, unemployment fell and profits rose. In November President Donald Trump signed a trade pact with Mexico and Canada. If talks over the next month lead to a deal with Xi Jinping, relieved markets will conclude that the trade war is about political theatre and squeezing a few concessions from China, not detonating global commerce.

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Slowbalisation”

Slowbalisation: The future of global commerce

From the January 26th 2019 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

This illustration shows a Chinese dragon with circuit-like patterns confronting a microchip featuring the U.S. flag

The front line of the tech war is in Asia

The two superpowers are vying for influence. China will not necessarily win

A refinery in the South Pars Gas-Condensate field in Asalouyeh, Iran

How high could the oil price go?

Geopolitical risk is rising. But so is the supply of oil


The Trumpification of American policy

No matter who wins in November, Donald Trump has redefined both parties’ agendas


How Florida should respond to Hurricane Milton

Storms like it raise uncomfortable questions about the state’s future

Britain should not hand the Chagos Islands to Mauritius

Once again, the Chagossians have been denied a say

A map of a fruit fly’s brain could help us understand our own

A miracle of complexity, powered by rotting fruit