Media mentions – Geoeconomics
Diploweb quotes ECFR’s report “Defending Europe’s Economic Sovereignty: new ways to resist economic coercion” in its October newsletter
Can it be set so high on the political agenda and it be made such an important issue for Europe that it gets increasingly difficult politically for the Americans to sanction?
Turkish foreign policy seems to overestimate the country’s own economic strength
Matteo Colombo, ECFR Junior Pan-European Fellow, comments on the gap between Turkish foreign policy ambitions and its economic strength
The tariffs won’t go away. The data-transfer coercion won’t go away. On sanctions, it’s not even clear 100% [whether Biden will lift them]
Germany in particular benefits from the fact that Europe, in contrast to much of the rest of the world, does not rely on protectionism but on free and fair trade
In geoeconomic terms, Germany and Europe are concerned with more than a single project: how to respond to the increasing use of extraterritorial measures
The whole beauty of the Franco-German duo was that they are very different, especially on economic policy, but when they found a compromise, it would work for most of Europe with some tweaks here and there