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Five Ds transforming the global economy in 2025

Économie mondiale 2025 | Tendances

The World Economic Forum breaks down the five factors driving major structural shifts in the world’s economy and financial markets.

Here are the five main trends:

Deglobalization
Decarbonization
Demographics
Debt
Digitalization

The global economy is undergoing significant changes, driven by five fundamental forces: deglobalisation, decarbonisation, demographics, debt, and digitalisation. Some transformations have emerged out of actions taken during the pandemic, while others are due to ongoing geopolitical rivalries and social and environmental factors. But one thing is certain – these forces are reshaping markets and creating a difficult decision space for policymakers and investors.

The interaction between these forces is creating complex economic dynamics. These factors create inflationary pressures and constrain monetary policy effectiveness. However, digital technologies could help optimise energy consumption and accelerate clean technology development, potentially offsetting inflationary impacts while delivering broader productivity gains.

For the financial industry, these shifts also present unique opportunities. Large capital flows will be necessary to meet changing demands. The wealth and asset management industry, liquidity providers, and risk management tools will play crucial roles in navigating these challenges.

1- Deglobalisation

Trade tensions, geopolitical rivalries, and supply chain vulnerabilities are accelerating the retreat from globalisation. According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), trade restrictions have dramatically increased from approximately 1,000 in 2019 to more than 3,000 in 2023, with further increases expected under the anticipated new Trump administration’s tariff policies.

This shift presents significant economic challenges, particularly inflation. Research from the IMF and Bank for International Settlements (BIS) demonstrates that open economies typically experience lower inflation rates.

Deglobalisation also reduces efficiency gains from specialisation and competition while limiting economies of scale. Additionally, emerging and developing economies face disproportionate impacts due to their reliance on foreign direct investment and exposure to energy and commodity risks.

However, some regions are finding opportunities – Southeast Asia is developing new trading patterns as US-China relations continue to evolve.

2- Decarbonisation

Climate scientist Veerabhadran Ramanathan warns that global warming is accelerating, with potential critical impacts as early as 2030 if emissions continue unchecked. Recent evidence is compelling: increasing Australian wildfires, extreme rainfall in Dubai, European floods, and intensifying US hurricanes.

These climate events drive inflation through necessary fiscal support and adaptation measures. While green bonds and sustainable loans are expanding, they haven’t reached the scale needed to address these challenges.

Government fiscal support will likely be required to bridge this gap, despite the lack of corresponding productivity increases or tax base expansion.

3- Demographics

Aging populations and declining workforces are creating significant economic pressures. Increased longevity, combined with falling birth rates, is escalating the fiscal burden of healthcare and retirement benefits.

As highlighted at the recent US Federal Reserve meetings, financial markets have become increasingly sensitive to these fiscal strains and their monetary policy implications.

With limited options for rewriting social contracts, aging populations and rising dependency ratios are contributing to lower productivity and increased inflationary pressures while exacerbating fiscal constraints.

4- Debt

Global debt has reached an unprecedented USD307 trillion, primarily driven by developed nations. The COVID-19 pandemic alone added USD50tn in government debt among developed economies. Furthermore, debt servicing costs in the US are projected to exceed the defence budget in 2025, with this trend expected to worsen.

The private sector faces its own debt challenges. US companies with high-yield debt are approaching a significant maturity wall of USD200bn due in 2024-25 and USD1.1tn in 2024-28.

This elevated debt environment limits government capacity for crucial investments in infrastructure, education and research, potentially crowding out private sector growth through higher interest rates.

5- Digitalisation

Amid these challenges, digitalisation – particularly artificial intelligence – offers a promising counterforce to growth constraints. Generative AI is projected to deliver productivity growth of approximately 1.5% annually, with potential economic benefits ranging from USD2.6tn to USD4.4tn across industries.

Unlike previous technological disruptions, generative AI’s accessibility and versatility may help overcome traditional adoption barriers.

Sources:

5 transformational trends shaping global finance, World Economic Forum, 2025
High Uncertainty and the Unknown, International Monetary Fund, 2024
Has globalization changed the inflation process?, Bank for International Settlements, 2019

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