Geopolitics Unplugged

DAVOS REVIEW: January 23, 2026


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The World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2026 concluded today under the theme “A Spirit of Dialogue.” The final day centered on economic realism, with leaders stressing resilience in growth figures despite geopolitical frictions, trade policy shifts, and technological disruptions. Amid ongoing debates on multipolarity and cooperation, Day 5 prioritized distinguishing long-term signals from short-term rhetoric.

Full recap below with no fluff, just sources and highlights.

Key Signals from Day 5

* Economic resilience shines through disruptions: Global growth projected at 3.3%, described as solid but insufficient to warrant complacency.

* Wealth inequality deepens as major risk: Warnings that unaddressed disparities in distribution could lead to “real trouble” for societies and economies.

* AI threatens middle-class jobs as “tsunami”: Automation risks accelerating displacement, with calls for global cooperation to manage impacts.

* No full “rupture” in global order: Pushback against dramatic breaks; emphasis on adaptive “Plans B,” multipolarity, and sustained dialogue.

* Trade flows persist despite uncertainties:Adaptive policies urged over alarmism, with focus on productivity, innovation, and problem-solving.

Global Economic Outlook Panel

Moderated by Andrew R. Sorkin (CNBC / The New York Times)

Panelists: Christine Lagarde (President, European Central Bank), Kristalina Georgieva (Managing Director, International Monetary Fund), Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (Director-General, World Trade Organization), Mohammed Al-Jadaan (Minister of Finance, Saudi Arabia), Albert Bourla (Chairman and CEO, Pfizer).

* Christine Lagarde pushed back on notions of a complete rupture in the global order (referencing earlier comments like those from Mark Carney), stating: “I’m not exactly on the same page... I think we should be talking about alternatives.” She called for “Plan B, or Plans B,” urging to “distinguish the signal from the noise” after a week of high-profile disruptions.

* Lagarde highlighted deepening wealth disparities: “We have to be careful about the distribution of wealth and the disparity that is getting deeper and bigger... we are heading for real trouble” if ignored. She emphasized improving Europe’s investment climate, promoting innovation, and noted that AI progress depends on international cooperation to prevent fragmentation.

* Kristalina Georgieva described the current global environment as permanent change: “We’re not in Kansas anymore.” She presented the IMF’s 3.3% growth forecast as “beautiful but not enough... do not fall into complacency,” citing unexpected economic strength despite trade tensions and policy shifts.

* Georgieva flagged her top concern as the “impending impact on the middle class” from AI-driven job losses, terming it a potential “tsunami” that could affect 60% of jobs in advanced economies based on IMF research.

* Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala stressed resilience in trade flows despite uncertainties, advocating adaptive strategies for businesses and policymakers rather than reactive “fire-fighting.” She noted high uncertainty levels are unlikely to persist, urging focus on collaborative global problem-solving.

* Mohammed Al-Jadaan and Albert Bourla contributed to discussions on growth drivers, productivity (especially in regions like Europe), and the need for pragmatic adaptation amid broader geopolitical and technological pressures. No major new energy-sector disruptions (oil, natural gas) were flagged, though resilience themes indirectly support stable commodity outlooks in multipolar contexts.

Other Notable Addresses

There were limited additional major public sessions marked the wrap-up day, with closing remarks by Børge Brende (President, World Economic Forum) reflecting on the week’s dialogue themes. Discussions echoed broader motifs of multipolarity, nationalism versus multilateralism, and pragmatic cooperation without new head-of-state addresses.

Day 5 underscored resilience in underlying economic structures amid exogenous shocks, inequality risks, and tech disruptions. Leaders blended measured optimism on growth with realism about fractures, emphasizing dialogue, adaptive planning, and truth-telling over alarmism or complacency.

For primary sources:

* WEF Global Economic Outlook session page

* https://www.weforum.org/meetings/world-economic-forum-annual-meeting-2026/sessions/global-economic-outlook-af4fed3639/

* Live from Davos 2026: Day 5 highlights

* https://www.weforum.org/stories/2026/01/live-from-davos-2026-what-to-know-on-day-5

* 4 takeaways from Davos 2026

* https://www.weforum.org/stories/2026/01/4-takeaways-from-davos-2026/

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