{"id":127471,"date":"2022-05-24T16:03:52","date_gmt":"2022-05-24T16:03:52","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/?p=127471"},"modified":"2022-05-24T16:03:52","modified_gmt":"2022-05-24T16:03:52","slug":"world-economic-forum-founder-stresses-cooperation-to-tackle-war-and-pandemic-challenges","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/markets\/world-economic-forum-founder-stresses-cooperation-to-tackle-war-and-pandemic-challenges\/","title":{"rendered":"World Economic Forum Founder stresses cooperation to tackle war and pandemic challenges"},"content":{"rendered":"

London (CNN Business)<\/cite>One of the many buzzwords percolating around Davos this week is “fragmentation,” the force economists there warned could have “devastating human consequences.”<\/p>\n

By “fragmentation,” they are referring to a breakdown of the kind of free-wheeling, border-crossing trade and investment that’s defined the global economic order over the past three decades. It is a form of deglobalization \u2014 rebuilding fences around national or regional fiefdoms.
\n“Fragmentation is the sense that we may be having economies protect themselves a little more domestically, and that could slow things down,” Josh Lipsky, director of the Atlantic Council’s GeoEconomics Center, told me. “And then it may make things more expensive in return.”<\/p>\n