It’s time for the second draft of globalisation - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
全球化

It’s time for the second draft of globalisation

Capital markets need to be better attuned to individual countries’ goals and the interests of workers
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":6.04,"text":"The writer is the chair and chief executive of BlackRock"}],[{"start":10.2,"text":"The global economy is in a strange place: we know more about the next seven years than the next seven days."}],[{"start":17.2,"text":"For nearly two months, I’ve been travelling around the world and hearing the same question: what’s going to happen with tariffs? There are only guesses. The worst-case scenario is bleak: supply shocks, spiralling inflation, economic slowdown. But at this point, the guessing itself has become a commodity, priced in, speculated to death, endlessly churned through headlines."}],[{"start":43.08,"text":"That’s the seven-day story. The seven-year story is quieter, but far more consequential."}],[{"start":49.48,"text":"The Trump administration’s tariffs are the symptom of a backlash to the era of what might be called “globalism without guardrails”. Global GDP grew more since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 than in all recorded history before it. But the benefits weren’t evenly shared. S&P 500 investors saw a return of more than 3,800 per cent. Rustbelt workers did not."}],[{"start":77.08,"text":"So it’s no surprise that this model of globalisation is now coming apart. But its proposed replacement — economic nationalism behind sealed borders — isn’t any more convincing."}],[{"start":89.16,"text":"The real question here is what replaces the model that led us to this point. And the answer is coming into focus. It’s neither globalism nor protectionism, but a blend: open markets with national goals — and workers — in mind."}],[{"start":105.32,"text":"At the heart of this new model are the capital markets: exchanges where people invest in stocks, bonds, infrastructure, everything. Why? Because markets are uniquely suited to transforming global growth into local wealth — even though, historically, that hasn’t always happened."}],[{"start":124.52,"text":"Under globalisation, money often chased returns around the world without necessarily benefiting the people back home. We should still want capital to move freely towards opportunity — that’s what makes markets efficient. But that doesn’t mean countries can’t steer more of that capital home."}],[{"start":143.6,"text":"In a more nationally attuned model, markets channel citizens’ savings into local businesses and infrastructure. The gains flow back to people, helping them afford homes, education, retirement. Put simply: people will fuel their country’s economic growth, and own a piece of it."}],[{"start":162,"text":"The first step? Helping more people become investors. This is the deeper shift I’m seeing in the economy. Governments are rethinking whom markets are for. For decades, they primarily served countries’ wealthiest citizens and largest institutions. Now, countries are democratising markets recognising that the same factory worker left behind by globalisation can be an investor, too."}],[{"start":188.68,"text":"Take Japan. Until recently, it had no tax-incentivised way to invest for retirement. Now its Nisa programme is booming — enrolment surpassed 25mn last year. Meanwhile, lawmakers in the US are weighing a market-based twist on baby bonds: an investment account for every American at birth. Even a modest deposit could grow, by the age of 50, into a retirement cushion or college fund."}],[{"start":216.08,"text":"But creating more investors is only half the battle. Every market has two sides: the people who invest, and the places where capital gets put to work. Ensuring it’s put to work domestically is hard, and in Europe, for instance, it has triggered an economic reckoning."}],[{"start":233.48,"text":"Capital can’t fuel growth if it’s trapped in bureaucracy. Yet the EU operates under 27 different legal systems. And even if you navigate that red tape and decide to invest — say, in an energy company — it can take 13 years just to permit a power line. You might back that project to meet soaring demand from data centres, but if those centres are training artificial intelligence, it triggers an entirely new layer of regulation. The result is paralysis. Europeans save more than three times as much of their income as Americans, but invest far less of it."}],[{"start":271.36,"text":"However, the ground in Europe is shifting. There’s growing momentum to remove the barriers holding capital back: faster permitting, less red tape on AI, a single regulatory framework instead of 27, and, most critically, a true savings and investments union. If I were an EU politician, that union would be my top priority. Investors will be watching closely to see if the reforms stick."}],[{"start":297.68,"text":"Of course, expanding markets won’t fix everything. Unchecked, financialisation can fuel inequality. That was the first draft of globalisation: enormous wealth, unevenly distributed, with little thought for who benefited — or where. What’s emerging now is globalisation’s second draft, a re-globalisation built not just to generate prosperity, but to aim it towards the people and places left behind the first time."}],[{"start":332,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1749024615_4278.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

与特朗普通话后俄罗斯对乌克兰发动创纪录空袭

美国停止交付关键拦截器后,克里姆林宫派出500多架伊朗设计的无人机。

印度证监会暂时禁止Jane Street交易证券

该监管机构指责这家总部位于纽约的交易公司实施了操纵衍生品市场的“险恶计划”。

特朗普以“大而美”的政策胜利加强了对权力的控制

美国总统在7月4日庆祝上任数月来取得的一系列成就。

“埃隆终于醒悟”:马斯克努力从特朗普手中拯救特斯拉

世界首富的政治威胁并没有阻止总统的“大而美法案”损害这家电动汽车制造商的利润。

稳定币是如何从小众产品变成普遍战略的?

这种因由美元等现实资产支持而被称为“稳定”的数字货币,已成为美国政府重点关注的项目,也成为企业董事会的热议话题。

工党因福利改革失败内讧

斯塔默放弃了福利改革,这引发了议会内外对斯塔默及其盟友政治判断的怀疑。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×