Comment: Coronavirus, or Covid-19, has already upended global financial markets. The havoc it's wreaking on global politics is only just beginning … and politics doesn't bounce back as easily or as quickly as markets do.
As the last few weeks have made clear, the world in 2020 is nowhere near ready to launch a co-ordinated, comprehensive response in the coronavirus battle. In an era of "my nation first" politics, it is also an era of "my nation first" responses to the greatest global health crisis the world has seen in recent memory. Coronavirus is, in other words, the first true crisis of our current GZero era of geopolitics.
Compare the world's response to the coronavirus to the way it tackled the great financial crisis of 2008/2009. Faced with a catastrophic event, world leaders came together to chart a united way forward, and while there was no shortage of economic drama in the weeks and months that followed, a complete global financial meltdown was staved off thanks to quick and co-ordinated action at the head-of-state level, which convened under the auspices of the G20 for the first time ever to deal with the pressing world threat.
That isn't happening this time around. Set against multiple geopolitical battles currently raging — between China and the US, between South Korea and Japan, between Turkey and the EU, to name just a few — the world will not come together with the sense of urgency and unity this crisis deserves. And all this comes with a global economy already slowing despite low interest rates, limiting the ammunition central banks worldwide have to combat the worst of the economic effects. A joint declaration by G7 finance ministers earlier this week—not to mention an emergency rate cut by the US Fed—did nothing to slow the financial panic.