Eurasia Geopolitical Report
Eurasia Geopolitical Report
Eurasia Geopolitical Report
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Independent America
China overreacts
A weaker Merkel
No reform
Technology and the Middle East
Central banks get political
The White House versus Silicon Valley
Turkey
North Korea
South Africa
Red herrings
Overview
IAN BREMMER, President
CLIFF KUPCHAN, Chairman
Its been six years since we first wrote about the coming G-Zero
worlda world with no global leader.The underlying shifts in the
geopolitical environment have been clear: a US with less interest
in assuming leadership responsibilities; US allies, particularly
in Europe, that are weaker and looking to hedge bets on US
intentions; and two frenemies, Russia and China, seeking toassert
themselvesas (limited) alternatives to the USRussia primarily on
the security front in its extended backyard, and China primarily on
the economic front regionally, and, increasingly, globally.
These trends have accelerated with the populist revolt against globalismfirst in the
Middle East, then in Europe, and now in the US. Through 2016, you could see the G-Zero picking up speed on multiple fronts: the further deterioration of the transatlantic alliance with Brexit and the no vote on the Italy referendum; the end of Americas Asia
pivot with the collapse of the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Philippine president
announcing a break with the US; the Russian victory in Syria after backingPresident
Bashar al Assad throughnearly six years of war.
But with the shock election of Donald Trump as president of the US, the G-Zero
world is now fully upon us.The triumph of America first as the primary driver
of foreign policy in the worlds only superpower marks a break with decades of US
exceptionalism and belief in the indispensability of US leadership, however flawed
and uneven. With it ends a 70-year geopolitical era of Pax Americana, one in which
globalization and Americanization were tightly linked, and American hegemony in
security, trade, and promotion of values provided guardrails for the global economy.
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Independent America
Trumps America first philosophy and his pledge to make
America great again build on the most core of American values:
independence. For Trump, that means independence from
America's responsibility to play an indispensable role in world
affairs, shaking off theburdens placed on the US by multilateral
institutions and a range of allies.If theres not an obvious, near-term
benefit for the US, or if its the provision of a public good where
others are free riding, its not something the US should be doing.
This is not isolationism. As leader of the worlds most powerful country, Trump rejects
the comparative weakness of the presidency, and he wants to moredirectly project
American power in service of US national interests.Hes a resolute unilateralist.
Militarily, independent America doesnt signal a reluctance to use force, but a decisive willingness to use it to defend core US interests with less regard for the consequences for others: Trump has promised to bomb the hell out of ISIS, extend surveillance capabilities,and otherwise leverage US coercive power to punishenemies.
Independent America will be more hawkish than Barack Obamas foreign policy.
Economically, independent America translates into industrial policyif the excesses
of free markets allow corporations to capture the state, Trump wants to use the power
of the presidency to turn the tables on key economic actors.He has a fundamental
mistrust of existing free trade relationships and of globalist multinational corporations
that he believes are enriching themselves without regard for the well-being of American workers.Trump will promote patriotism on both frontsby squeezing bilateral
relationships to create better terms for a more powerful America and by using carrots
and sticks to convince corporations to invest more (and keep more jobs) in the US.
The shift is greatest on values: independent America renounces exceptionalism, the
notion that the USactively promotes democracy, civil rights, and rule of law.Trumps
approach toward alliances, and multilateral institutions more broadly, is transactional. Talk of common values can become a smokescreen that allowsallies to take advantage of the US. And the US doesnt always live up to those values anyway.Alliances
Trump rejects
the comparative
weakness of the
presidency, and
he wants to more
directly project
American power
in service of US
national interests
Domestic focus
Americans want new
president to focus on
improving...
62%
48%
63%
Independent
Domestic problems
Other countries problems
Dont know
Note: Survey was conducted
1219 April 2016
Source: Pew Research Center
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Domestic policy
17%
Foreign policy
13%
China overreacts
Chinas scheduled leadership transition this fall will shape its
political and economic trajectory for a decade or more. The scale
of elite turnover before, during, and after the upcoming 19th Party
Congress, combined with the divisive political environment that
President Xi has fostered, will make this transition one of the most
complex events since the beginning of Chinas reform era.
Two risks flow from the upcoming power consolidation. First, because Xi will
be extremely sensitive to external challenges to his countrys interests at a time
when all eyes are on his leadership, the Chinese president will be more likely
than ever to respond forcefully to foreign policy challenges. Spikes in US-China
tensions are the likely outcome. Second, by prioritizing stability over difficult
policy choices in the run-up to the party congress, Xi may unwittingly increase
the chances of significant policy failures.
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South China Sea: Regional tensions will persist and will drive
military modernization
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A weaker Merkel
This year will bring another wave ofpolitical risks in Europe, and
some of them will surely materialize.Disputes over Brexit will
distract and deepen mistrust between the UK and Europe; French
elections could lead to the far-right euroskeptic National Front
taking power; the Greek crisis will continue to simmer without
resolution; Turkeys slide toward authoritarianism will continue
while the countrys refugee deal with the EU could easily come apart;
and large-scale terrorismremains a far greater risk than anywhere
else in the developed world.
Since the Eurozone crisis, Europe has benefited from the stalwart leadership of
Chancellor Angela Merkel.Could the Europeans have resolved their financial crises without the Germans forcing a solution?Would the Eurozone even have stayed
together?Its hard to imagine.
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but the relationship was personally warm and diplomatically well aligned. Not so with Trump, who cares
little for the values that are core to Merkels leadership.When the US-Russia relationship comes back on
line, other European states will see an opportunity to
rebuild ties with Moscow. Brexit will remove British
support for her leadership. The Italians, for a brief
Polls show declining support for Merkel and her grand coalition
Grand coalition
Current Bundestag
composition
Distribution of 631 seats 49.3%
30.6%
10.1%
10%
Linke
Green
Grand coalition
Projected Bundestag
composition
Average of latest polls 36%
CDU/CSU
21%
13%
11%
10%
6%
SPD
AfD
Linke
Green
FDP
Liberals
Note: Distribution of seats in the projected scenario was calculated as a proportion of approval ratings
Sources: Forsa (28 December 2016), Ipsos (24 December 2016), Emnid (24 December 2016)
Merkels geopolitical clout is erodingjust as quickly.Obama didnt always deliver on his commitments,
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No reform
Leadership will also be lacking this year on other issues, as
political officials in both developed and emerging economies
avoid structural reform, undermining prospects for growth and
new opportunities for investors.
The drivers of this logjam fall into four categories.
First, some national leaders feel as though theyve already done their part. In India, Narendra Modi will mainly be resting on his laurels after passing a milestone
goods and services tax, implementing monetary and bankruptcy policy reform,
and liberalizing FDI in many important sectors. This year, hell turn his focus to
winning state elections. In Mexico, Enrique Pena Nieto will look toward the end of
his presidency, having already achieved energy, telecoms, education, and tax reform. He knows he has no mandate to add to this list.
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China
Argentina
Positive trajectory
Brazil
France
Neutral trajectory
Germany
India
Mexico
Nigeria
Italy
Russia
Saudi
Arabia
South
Africa
Turkey
UK
Negative trajectory
Note: Eurasia Groups Political Trajectories capture analysts forward-looking, net assessment of political risk and are intended to capture our bottom-line views on how politics will
affect the macro business environment.
Source: Eurasia Group
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Technology,
a force for
economic growth
and efficiency,
also exacerbates
political instability
Technology, a force for economic growth and efficiency, also exacerbates political instability. In the Middle East, the latter outcome is proving dominant for
several reasons:
Energy.The social contract across much of the Middle East is predicated on lots of
cash, generated by the oil and gas sector, to ensure the loyalty of citizens.The model has been subverted by the energy revolution, which has enabled new fracking
and enhanced recovery technologies in the US to quickly and substantially weaken
OPEC.The trend will intensify, bringing prices down and undermining the legitimacy of many of the regions governments.
Connectivity.Globalization causes backlash in the West.Connectivity causes
backlash in the Middle East. The Middle East has forces for social and economic
progress, but alienated populations can now communicate their grievances more
easily. Terrorists can recruit.And new tools of communication bring together like for
like.Shia, Sunni, Kurds, and those who define their identities by tribal allegiance talk
within the group, but not with other groups. Each group develops a world view completely distinct from its neighbors. All of this poses a real threat to existing regimes.
Cyber.Iran is one of the biggest users of cyber-weapons, and it is much less constrained than in the past.Were seeing a growing number of attacks on Saudi
Arabia, with little effective reaction by the Saudis or their erstwhile allies, the
Americans.Regional terrorists are developing new cyber-skills to challenge Middle
Eastern systems.
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Internet penetration
Palestine 62%
Lebanon 75%
Syria 30%
Iran 71%
Iraq 37%
Jordan 74%
Kuwait 80%
Bahrain 93%
Israel 72%
Qatar 96%
UAE 92%
Saudi Arabia 65%
Oman 71%
Yemen 24%
LOW
HIGH
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turn independent technocrats into political scapegoats and put new pressure on future Fed decisions.
If the central bank were then to move with greater
caution, the president might accuse it of allowing
inflation to hurt Americans. Most critically, theres a
risk that Trump will seize the opportunity presented
to him by Chairwoman Janet Yellens departure in
January 2018 to replace her with a personal ally, a
move that would undermine the Feds reputation for
years. Its a no-win situation for the Fed this yearits
standing will take a hit no matter what.
In the Eurozone, the risk is that the European Central Bank (ECB) will not have the political support
needed to rescue the ailing economies of peripheral
states the next time the continent faces a shock.
Since President Mario Draghi used his whatever it
takes speech in 2012 to commit unwavering support
to saving the Eurozone, the ECB has consistently
come to the aid of Europes economies in need. But
this was never a popular policy with establishment
figures, and it has only become more controversial
of late, as illustrated by Schaeubles tough recent
comments. The risk now is that Draghi will not feel
he has the necessary backing to bolster the Eurozone
following a presidential victory for Frances Le Pen
or a Five Star Movement take-over in Italy, however
unlikely these potential shocks might seem today.
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Technology
leaders from
California, the
major state that
voted in largest
numbers against
Trump in the
election, have
a bone to pick
with the new
president
The conflict with Silicon Valley is different.Technology leaders from California, the
major state that voted in largest numbers against Trump in the election, have a bone
to pick with the new president. Aside from Peter Thiel, the valleys entrepreneurs
have fundamentally different world views from the new president.Trumps political
agenda leads with national security, while Silicon Valleys core ideology centers on
freedom and privacy.Trump wants jobs, while Silicon Valley is driving workplace
automation.And while support for science was one of Obamas strengths, its at best a
second-tier priority for the Trump administration, and at worst an inconvenient truth.
There are a few arenas in which this fight will take place.First is new media.Trumps
mastery of social media, big data, and the ability to take advantage of algorithms
for news and fake news was critical to his election victory.Silicon Valley chiefs were
slow to recognize the problem (and a libertarian streak generally led to a hands
off approach); but after Trumps election, information and new media firms made
limiting the so-called alt-rights influence a top priority. That means trying to limit
the spread of fake news and creating programs that cut off bots that act as individuals.Trumps preoccupation with the media makes this a critical area of concern for
him. Its a direct threat to his ability to maintain his popularityand the appeal of his
brandand one hell feel the need to combat.
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Brad
Smith
Eric
Trump
Ivanka
Trump
Larry
Page
Sheryl
Sandberg
Mike
Pence
Donald
Trump
Peter
Thiel
Tim
Cook
Safra
Catz
Elon
Musk
Stephen
Miller
Many contentious issues came up during the meeting, but they were
likely not discussed in depth.
Wilbur
Ross
Gary
Cohn
Donald
Trump Jr.
Trump Camp
Brian
Krzanich
Alex
Karp
Eric
Schmidt
Steve
Bannon
Reince
Priebus
Jared
Kushner
Chuck
Robbins
Ginni
Rometty
Satya
Nadella
see more fights like the one between Apple and the
FBI over access to data after the San Bernardino
attacks. A constellation of IT firms will face off with
the National Security Agencyover potential security
threats.This will create an early test of the privacy
shield on signals intelligence activities (placing limits on bulk surveillance), which is up for review this
spring. This is an area where Trump will likely push
back, not least because its a lever he can use to ensure more favorable treatment from new media.
And finally theres the jobs angle. During the campaign, Trump made the return of jobs a messaging
priority, but he discussed the problem only in terms
of globalization rather than technological change,
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Turkey
Last Julys failed coup has introduced greater political
uncertainty and economic volatility in Turkey, as Erdogan
continues to use the ongoing state of emergency to seize control
of day-to-day affairs and tighten his hold on the judiciary,
bureaucracy, media, and even business sector through waves of
arrests and purges. Erdogan is now looking to legitimize his de
facto expansion of powers, and with the help of the opposition
Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), Turkey is likely to hold a
referendum on that question this spring. Unlike other referenda
on the continent, the vote should be a win for the increasingly
authoritarian president. Erdogans drive to centralize powers
will exacerbate many of the existing pressures on Turkeys
domestic governance, economy, and foreign relations.
Voters are close to evenly split on the question of expanding the presidents powers, and Erdogan will have to mount an aggressive campaign to win. On the political front, that means the government will continue its witch-hunt against Gulenists, and tighten its already strict control over government institutions and the
media. On the economic front, Erdogan will face pressure to sustain populist, progrowth measures at a time when tightening external liquidity conditions demand a
rethink of economic policy. Hell press the central bank to keep rates low and rely
increasingly on fiscal stimulus to offset slowing growth. Erdogan will avoid sorely
needed structural reforms of taxes, labor, and pensions.
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10 December
Erdogans Justice and Development
Party and MHP announce reforms
that would give the presidency vast
and unchecked powers
Late December
Parliamentary commissions
discuss reforms, make
minor changes
Oct
2016
Nov
Dec
Jan
2017
Feb
Mar
Apr
Presidential and
parliamentary elections
(currently scheduled for 2019)
Majority of reforms come
into effect: presidency
strengthened and prime
ministers post is removed
May
Jun
2019
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North Korea
2017 will be a big year for North Korea. Thats not a good thing.
The North Koreans have substantially advanced their nuclear and
missile programs and are set to expand them further. The hermit
kingdom may have enough fissile material for some 20 nuclear
weapons.Its getting closer to mastering warhead miniaturization
technology, and thus possessing an intercontinental ballistic missile
capability that could strike the West Coast of the US with a nuclear
weapon.US policymakers consider this a red line (apparently the
North Koreans hitting Alaska isnt particularly worrisome).
US policy continues to focus on complete elimination of the program: rollback, not
just containment. In other words, North Korea has to get ridof all of its nukes.(As
with Assad must go and Russia must leave Ukraine.) Absent that, theUS sanctions will be expanded.
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Nuclear test
This scenario unfolds in an environment where US-China relations are already deteriorating, over Taiwan and
US trade actions. The result is a US-China crisis; Beijing
rejects all Trumps actions. Japan is stuck on the US
side, creating bigger China-Japan risks as well.
Missile test
Successful test
2014
2015
2016
Failed test
The second risk: South Korean President Park Geunhye is forced from office and replaced with a center-left government that favors diplomacy with North
Korea over coercion. The new South Korean government effectively cancels the terminal high altitude air
missile defense system and refuses to work with the
US on new sanctions and military options. A tough
Trump response generates a crisis in the US-South
Korea alliance that sends shockwaves through the
rest of Asia at a time when Asian leaders are already
questioning Trumps commitment to the region. This
reignites Japan-South Korea tensions, especially if
the new government in Seoul rejects Parks deal with
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on resolution of historical
disputes between the two countries.
For the past decade, North Korea has been a problem
but not a significant risk. That changes in 2017.
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South Africa
The political crisis pitting President Jacob Zuma against opponents
within and beyond the ruling African National Congress (ANC)
will worsen in 2017, putting the South African economy at greater
risk and damaging regional stability. Having narrowly averted
challenges to his leadership in 2016, Zuma will focus on domestic
battles and dig in his heels this year, preventing reformers from
taking needed steps to restore the countrys economic stability.
Internal ANC discord will weigh particularly on state-owned
enterprise management. State-utility Eskom holds the largest share
of government guarantees, and its balance sheet will loom over the
sovereign rating for the medium to long term, particularly with a
Zuma ally, Ben Ngubane, serving as chairman.
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28-29 Nov
Motion for Zuma
to voluntarily resign
2-13 Dec
Ratings agencies
11-31 Oct 2-10 Nov
decide not to
Charges brought against finance Accusations emerge downgrade
minister, but eventually withdrawn of patronage network South Africa
23-31 Aug
Rumors of charges against
finance minister reemerge
14.5
14.0
13.5
13.0
12.5
12.0
July
August
September
October
November
December
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Red herrings
US domestic policy
Independent America is the top risk but US domestic policy is a red herring? Yes.
The Trump cabinet is more coherent on domestic issues.Its more aligned with
the Republican Partys congressional leadership. On domestic policy, Congress has
more power to impose checks on White House preferences, and the wheels of the
legislature turn slowly even on a good day. Plus the decentralization of US legislative activity puts a lot of policy power in the hands of governors and mayors.
On domestic
policy, Congress
has more power
to impose checks
on White House
preferences
At least for 2017, the US domestic outlook is neutral to positive.Reducing some regulation, investing in infrastructure, bringing down corporate tax rates, simplifying
the individual tax codeat worst its slow and incremental, at best its a near-term
plus from a growth perspective.Theres plenty of longer-term downside if mishandled: a spiraling deficit if investments dont bring returns, privatization deals that
lead to corruption and inefficiency, widening mistrust between haves and have
nots if the jobs arent created.But theres no serious social instability in the country.Its important to remember that in the most important election of their lifetimes, nearly half of eligible Americans didnt bother to vote.The critical political
driver for the US at home this year remains political apathy.Given all the heat of
political debate that well hear this year, its worth keeping that in mind.
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France
Netherlands
Austria
Brazil
Italy
Germany
Mexico
Hungary
Canada
Greece
Portugal
U.K.
Spain
Czech Republic
Slovakia
Ireland
57.9% of those
eligible voted in 2016
United States
Luxembourg
Estonia
Slovenia
Poland
Japan
Latvia
Chile
Switzerland
0%
20
40
60
80
100
Political and economic conditions surrounding President Michel Temer have deteriorated rapidly of late,
leading to increased concerns that he may not finish
his term in office. Not only is the economy struggling
to recover after a deep, multi-year recession, but ongoing investigations in the Lava Jato proberecently
fueled by plea bargains from executives at construction
company Odebrechthave implicated many of Temers
closest advisors, and even the president himself.
These pressures will make 2017 a difficult year for the
president, but they will also create more urgency for
legislators to approve important reforms, such as those
concerning the countrys pension system. Recognizing
that the economic conditions and corruption scandals
of the past several years have created unprecedented
popular anger toward politicians, lawmakers know
their only chance of preserving their seats in the 2018
general elections is to move forward on a policy agenda
that can generate at least a modest economic recovery.
Furthermore, legislators are increasingly aware that
failure to approve pension reform would have dramatic
consequences for financial markets and confidence in
the business sectordeepening the countrys crisis.
Fear that Temers fall might provoke a return to the
unhinged political and economic crises that characterized the past few years will be the single most important factor in keeping the president in office and
his reform agenda on track in 2017.
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London
New York
San Francisco
So Paulo
Singapore
Tokyo
Washington D.C.
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