A Reading of a World of Intersecting Crises… From Politics to Energy
Dr. Aly El Dakroury writes:
The world today is no longer facing a single crisis that can be contained or analyzed in isolation. Instead, we are witnessing a complex state of overlap between political, economic, and security challenges, where interests intertwine in ways that make the global landscape more volatile and far less predictable.
We are entering a new reality shaped by sharp intersections between crises. There are no clear boundaries separating them, and no isolated solutions capable of addressing each issue on its own.
Geopolitical tensions are no longer localized events. They have become direct drivers of the global economy, actively reshaping the balance of power among nations.
Energy is no longer just an economic resource. It has evolved into a highly sensitive strategic factor, tied to national security before it is tied to markets.
Any disruption in production regions or supply chains immediately impacts global markets, triggering successive waves of economic and political uncertainty.
In this interconnected environment, crises are no longer treated as exceptions, but as an ongoing condition upon which decisions are built. Economic planning is no longer based on assumptions of stability, but on managing uncertainty, a fundamental shift in global thinking.
What is notable is that international economic institutions are no longer focused on forecasting as much as they are on risk management.
The global scene no longer allows for a clear, linear view of growth or decline. It has become a system of overlapping circles of mutual influence.
Countries that have recognized this shift are already redefining their strategies: diversifying energy sources, strengthening economic resilience, and building internal capacities capable of absorbing shocks rather than collapsing under them.
On the other hand, less prepared nations remain more exposed to the impact of this phase, not only because of the crises themselves, but because of their accumulation and rapid transmission across the global system.
What the world is witnessing today cannot be reduced to isolated events. It is part of a prolonged process of reshaping the international order on new foundations, more complex and less stable than before.
The world no longer moves according to fixed rules, but within a constant system of rebalancing.
And those who read this transformation deeply understand that the future is not something to wait for… it is something to be understood before it takes shape.
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