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sábado, 1 de fevereiro de 2025

Project Syndicate talks to Yi Fuxian about China's decision-making, economic prospects, demographic crisis, and more

 Project Syndicate talks to Yi Fuxian about China's decision-making, economic

prospects, demographic crisis, and more

Jan 31, 2025

This week we talk with Yi Fuxian, a senior scientist at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, who spear-headed the movement against China's one-child
policy and is the author of Big Country with an Empty Nest
<https://www.abebooks.com/Big-Country-Empty-NestChinese-Edition-XIAN/11090336926/bd>  (China Development Press, 2013), which went from being banned
<https://archive.nytimes.com/sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/11/04/china-one-child-policy-book-fuxian-yi/>  in China to
<http://culture.people.com.cn/n/2013/1220/c172318-23899848.html> ranking
first in China Publishing Today's 100 Best Books of 2013 in China.


Project Syndicate: Just a few years ago, the "Chinese century" was widely
regarded as imminent. But, as you observe in your contribution to the
forthcoming PS Quarterly magazine, international economists are now lowering
their growth expectations for China and warning of the "Japanification" of
its economy. What does this emerging narrative get right, and what is it
missing?

Yi Fuxian: For decades, mainstream analysts unanimously predicted that
China's economy would surpass that of the United States. The Economist
projected
<https://www.economist.com/free-exchange/2011/01/10/how-to-gracefully-step-a
side>  in 2010 that this would happen in 2019. Goldman Sachs forecast
<https://www.economist.com/briefing/2023/05/11/how-soon-and-at-what-height-w
ill-chinas-economy-peak>  in 2011 that this point would be reached in 2026.
The Centre for Economics and Business Research, a British think tank,
predicted
<https://www.wsj.com/articles/will-chinas-economy-surpass-the-u-s-s-some-now
-doubt-it-11662123945?mod=article_inline>  that 2028 would be the year.
Chinese government economist Justin Yifu Lin
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/columnist/justin-yifu-lin>  was even
bolder, arguing
<http://theory.people.com.cn/n/2014/0325/c40531-24727451.html>  in 2011
that, by 2030, China's economy would be twice the size of America's.

1.

<https://www.project-syndicate.org/columnist/erwin-chemerinsky> Erwin
Chemerinsky worries about the obvious lack of meaningful checks on Donald
Trump's worst impulses.

The Chinese authorities were initially wary
<https://style.sina.com.cn/news/2010-01-20/085255242.shtml>  of economists'
rosy projections
<https://www.reuters.com/article/world/china-overtakes-japan-as-no-2-economy
-fx-chief-idUSTRE66T1HT/> , but began to embrace
<https://www.jingjidaokan.com/icms/null/null/ns:LHQ6LGY6LGM6MmM5NDkzOWM1MGE4
MjFmMjAxNTBjYjA2OGM2NDA1NzYscDosYTosbTo=/show.vsml>  them in 2014, touting
China's institutional advantage
<http://xinhuanet.com/english/2019-01/22/c_137765967.htm> . In 2016, the
government added
<https://chinamediaproject.org/2021/12/29/and-then-there-were-five/>
"culture" to its "confidence doctrine," which already included the "path,"
"theory," and "system" of "socialism with Chinese characteristics." But
these "four confidences" - and the lofty projections of mainstream analysts
- neglected a crucial factor: the legacy of China's one-child policy.

The consequences of that policy - an aging population and shrinking labor
force - were already transforming China's economic base. That is why I told
The New York Times in 2016 that China would never overtake
<https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/24/world/asia/china-yi-fuxian-boao-family-p
lanning.html>  the US economically. My words were intended as a warning to
China's leaders, whom I had previously engaged with as a state guest. But
rather than listen, they blacklisted me
<https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/28/opinion/chinese-economy-yi-fuxian.html>
.

At the same time, Chinese authorities adhere to the Marxist principle of
economic determinism; so, while they were unwilling to face demographic
realities, they could not ignore the changes altogether. They thus began to
pursue regressive policies in several domains, from politics and diplomacy
to economic regulation, social reform, and judicial development. In this
sense, 2015-16 was a watershed moment for China.

In 2019, when I published another commentary
<https://www.scmp.com/comment/insight-opinion/asia/article/2180421/worse-jap
an-how-chinas-looming-demographic-crisis-will>  arguing than China's looming
demographic crisis would doom its economic ambition, the authorities still
were not listening. They might not have wanted to hear that China's
demographic and economic outlook was bleaker than Japan's, but it was.
China's fertility rate has long been below Japan's - and remains so. By
2029-35, China will be worse off than the US on all demographic metrics, and
its economy will have fallen further behind.

The good news is that the mainstream narrative is now beginning to catch up
to reality. Goldman Sachs now predicts
<https://www.goldmansachs.com/insights/articles/emerging-stock-markets-proje
cted-to-overtake-the-us-by-2030>  that China will overtake the US
economically in 2035 (rather than 2026), and the Economist Intelligence Unit
has pushed
<https://www.goldmansachs.com/insights/articles/emerging-stock-markets-proje
cted-to-overtake-the-us-by-2030>  its 2015 forecast
<https://www.businessinsider.com/chinas-gdp-is-expected-to-surpass-the-us-in
-11-years-2015-6> , which said the crossover point would arrive in 2026, to
2039. The Centre for Economics and Business Research now says
<https://www.newsweek.com/2025/01/31/china-us-compete-biggest-economies-gdp-
population-birth-rates-2010768.html>  that China will not overtake the US
within the next 15 years.

These revised forecasts are a step in the right direction. Rather than
taking a linear approach, which assumes that China will continue on its
current trajectory, they take into account the country's demographic
disadvantages, which will continue to materialize. Nonetheless, they still
underestimate the severity of the problem, partly because they rely on
inflated
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/united-nations-population-figu
res-for-china-and-india-are-inflated-by-yi-fuxian-2023-05>  United Nations
population figures.

PS: These insights have important implications for America's China policy,
especially now that Donald Trump has returned to the White House. Given
demographic realities - which you
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/despite-fears-about-overcapaci
ty-china-manufacturing-decline-is-inevitable-by-yi-fuxian-2024-08> argue
imply the "fall of Chinese manufacturing" - what are the gravest economic
and foreign-policy mistakes his administration is at risk of making?

YF: From the late 1970s to the early 1990s, Japan was widely expected to
overtake the US economically. In fact, Americans were
<https://www.nytimes.com/1990/07/10/world/americans-voicing-anxiety-on-japan
-as-concern-in-tokyo-seems-to-soften.html> more concerned by the economic
threat from Japan than by the military threat from the Soviet Union, and
many believed that
<https://www.nytimes.com/1990/06/18/books/after-the-cold-war-the-land-of-the
-rising-threat.html> conflict with Japan was all but
<https://www.cato.org/commentary/remember-when-japan-was-going-take-over-wor
ld> inevitable. These concerns - which shaped US policy for well over a
decade - evaporated in the early 1990s, when Japan's economy stagnated due
to population aging. Clearly, such a profound shift in one country would
demand policy changes from its "rival."

History now seems to be repeating. Since Trump launched his "trade war"
against China in 2018, strategic anxiety, together with frustration over the
decline of US manufacturing (partly a result of unbalanced bilateral trade),
has defined US policy toward the country. This remained true under Trump's
successor, Joe Biden
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/columnist/joseph-biden-jr> .

But while US tariffs and other restrictions have succeeded at weakening
China's economy, they have done nothing to revive US manufacturing.
America's global share of manufacturing value-added has not increased, and
the manufacturing deficit, as a share of GDP, has not decreased. Moreover,
this policy approach has undermined the stability of the US-led
international order. If Trump maintains it during his second term, as
expected, China will instinctively become a "hedgehog" - closing itself into
a defensive posture, with quills that are sure to puncture a US that seeks
to "attack" it - and the world will become increasingly unstable.

Since China's economic
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/china-population-decline-will-
mean-economic-geopolitical-decline-by-yi-fuxian-2023-02>  and manufacturing
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/despite-fears-about-overcapaci
ty-china-manufacturing-decline-is-inevitable-by-yi-fuxian-2024-08>  decline
is demographically preordained, however, Trump need not allow geopolitical
anxieties to shape his China policy. This would allow for the more judicious
application of tariffs, and enable the kind of supply-chain cooperation that
would help the US to reinvigorate its manufacturing sector and reduce costs
for US producers and consumers.

The US could benefit more from bilateral economic cooperation with China
than with countries like India and Vietnam, to which supply chains have
shifted as the US "decouples" from China. Neither of these countries would
be able to increase imports from the US meaningfully, as they have lower
purchasing power per capita than China. Nor can they do much to help
revitalize US manufacturing, since they do not have strong manufacturing
industries themselves or complete industrial chains. (It would be difficult
and expensive for the US to build an industrial chain from scratch.)

But China - which still accounts for nearly one-third
<https://www.statista.com/chart/20858/top-10-countries-by-share-of-global-ma
nufacturing-output/>  of global manufacturing output - could. And by forcing
China to increase its imports from the US, Trump would reduce its ability to
use its large trade surplus to exert geopolitical influence. More important,
the US must cooperate with China to maintain a stable international order,
which is crucial to enable the US to reduce military spending. By pursuing
such cooperation with the US, China would be able effectively to compensate
the US geopolitically for bilateral trade imbalances.

In PS on Sunday, PS editors curate a selection of the past week's most
relevant, incisive, and powerful commentaries, so that you have all of the
information you need as you head into the new workweek.

PS: You
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/trump-tariffs-impact-on-chines
e-politics-by-yi-fuxian-2025-01> suggest that, by forcing China to nurture
its middle class, Trump's plan to increase tariffs on Chinese imports could
"open the way for political change of the sort Western leaders expected to
see in China decades ago." But in the latest issue of the Contemporary China
Review's "Scholars' Monograph," you argue that China will "never develop a
middle class strong enough to achieve structural political reform." What
sort of political transformation do you foresee in China in the coming
years, and what role will the Communist Party play?

YF: For over 2,000 years, an "invisible hand" has been shaping political
change in China: household income's share of GDP. In fact, it is because
household disposable income has been falling
<https://data.stats.gov.cn/index.htm>  - from 62% of GDP in 1983 to 44%
today, compared to an international average of 60-70% - that a strong middle
class did not emerge in China to demand democratic reform, despite four
decades of rapid economic growth.

Low household incomes suppressed domestic consumption, leaving China highly
dependent on its trade surplus with the US to provide jobs. But this
approach may no longer be tenable: if Trump fulfills his promise to impose
sweeping new tariffs, China's leaders might have little choice but to
implement policies aimed at raising household income's share of GDP. This
would strengthen the middle class. Furthermore, by reducing the government's
financial resources (already strained by population aging), Trump's tariffs
could force China's authorities to abandon their costly and repressive
"stability-maintenance" model, and instead start compromising with their
citizens.

Nonetheless, China's middle class will never be strong enough to bring about
a democratic transition, because population aging will undermine growth and
make it impossible to raise household incomes to the international norm. We
have seen this before: Japan's
<https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.PCAP.CD> per capita GDP
plummeted from 154% that of the US in 1995 to just 38% last year, and
household  <https://www.esri.cao.go.jp/jp/sna/sonota/kakei/kakei_top.html>
disposable income fell from 61% of
<https://www.e-stat.go.jp/en/stat-search/files?page=1&layout=dataset&toukei=
00100409> GDP to 52%, owing largely to the effects of population aging on
the economy and the public budget.

There is another problem: younger generations are typically at the vanguard
of democratization, but the share of China's population aged 15-29 has
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/china-has-too-few-young-people
-to-push-democratization-by-yi-fuxian-2022-12> dropped from 31% in 1989 to
16% today, and could fall to 9% by 2050. So, even if China experiences the
kind of turmoil that engulfed the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, a
youth-driven pro-democracy movement would not materialize. Instead, China's
huge elderly cohort would probably willingly sacrifice their freedom and
embrace a Communist Party strongman. No political force could quickly
simultaneously restore stability, provide social security and health care
for the vast elderly population, and promote democracy.

BY THE WAY . . .

PS: You have cited several factors impeding China's ability to improve its
demographic fortunes, including, in another forthcoming article, its
Confucian tradition. What is the relationship between Confucianism and
fertility, and what is China's best-case demographic scenario, given such
fundamental constraints?

YF: Like China, the other Confucian regions - Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan,
Singapore, Korea, and Japan - have histories of vibrant economic growth, but
now face low fertility rates. In 2022, the
<https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SP.DYN.TFRT.IN> fertility rate was 3.1
in the Arab world, 1.84 in Latin America, 1.67 in the US, and 1.46 in the
European Union, but only 1.26 in Japan, 0.87 in
<https://www.ris.gov.tw/documents/data/en/3/History-Table-7-2022.xls> Taiwan
and among
<https://www.singstat.gov.sg/find-data/search-by-theme/population/births-and
-fertility/latest-data> Singaporean Chinese, 0.78 in South Korea, 0.7 in
<https://www.healthbureau.gov.hk/statistics/en/health_statistics.htm> Hong
Kong, and 0.68 in  <https://www.dsec.gov.mo/en-US/Statistic?id=101> Macau.
As a trained obstetrician, I explain this phenomenon very differently from
sociologists and demographers.

For starters, in Confucian culture, security is provided by the family, and
fertility conforms to the biological principle of "entropy reduction"
(enhancing stability and order). The prevailing Western model of social and
economic development, in which the state is responsible for delivering a
social safety net, thus amounts to a powerful shock to the Confucian system.

Moreover, Confucianism deals only with the "present life," not the
"afterlife," so it encourages people to place greater emphasis on extending
their lives, and there is a strong negative correlation
<https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30844707/>  between life expectancy and
fertility. At the same time, Confucian parents believe that it is their
children who act as a "continuation" of their own lives, so they tend to
focus less on quantity and more on quality, having only as many children as
they feel they can properly provide for. Confucianism's emphasis on
education also might impel couples to have fewer children, in order to be
able to afford their schooling, while couples are likely to spend more time
on their own educations, reducing their childbearing years
<https://www.oecd.org/en/data/datasets/oecd-family-database.html> .

Finally, Confucian regions tend to have densely populated cities, in which
housing prices are high and living conditions are stressful. Just as density
inhibits the growth of cells, bacteria, or animal populations, so, too, does
<https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0304387817300135>  it
lead to reduced fertility <https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34914431/> .

Of course, Confucianism alone is not to blame for China's demographic woes.
A half-century of population control has transformed Chinese people's views
of childbearing, and social and economic patterns are still aligned with the
one-child policy. This helps to explain why China's fertility rate is as low
as Taiwan's, even though its social development lags behind the island's by
nearly two decades. The more developed Chinese province of Shanghai had a
fertility rate <https://www.thepaper.cn/newsDetail_forward_27481953>  of
just 0.6 in 2023. Avoiding demographic and civilizational collapse requires
nothing less than a social, economic, cultural, and political paradigm
shift.

PS: You also point out in the latest "Scholars' Monograph" that Russian
President Vladimir Putin has been banking on stable relations with a "rising
China" to prevent the "declining West" from holding him accountable for his
war of aggression in Ukraine. More broadly, China has been presenting itself
as a crucial partner for emerging and developing economies, capable of
leading an effective challenge to Western dominance. Will China's looming
economic decline thwart such efforts altogether? How should developing
economies be approaching their ties with China?

YF: There are some in both China and the US that want to fan the flames of
conflict. For example, Chinese ultra-nationalists might want their country
to challenge US hegemony more assertively, or American special interest
groups might hope to profit off a clash. So, Chinese and American scholars
have dressed up China, an old and sick cat, as a ferocious tiger and coaxed
it into a fight with the actual tiger that is the US.

In 2019, Putin said, "when tigers fight in the valley, the smart monkey sits
aside and waits to see who wins." In 2022, after more than two years of
watching, Russia finally took advantage of US-China enmity to launch its
full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Meanwhile, developing economies - misled by overly optimistic narratives
about China's economic prospects - jostled to get into China's good graces.
China's leaders, for their part, were intoxicated by the geopolitical
influence that accompanies economic clout. In 2021 - when China's GDP
<https://www.imf.org/external/datamapper/NGDPD@WEO/OEMDC/ADVEC/WEOWORLD>
reached 75% of America's, and seemed to be on the verge of surpassing it -
Chinese diplomats were vowing
<https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202210/1277623.shtml>  to "carry forward
the fighting spirit" to build
<https://www.mohrss.gov.cn/SYrlzyhshbzb/dongtaixinwen/shizhengyaowen/202106/
t20210602_415601.html>  a "new international order" to replace the existing
West-led system.

But, predictably, China soon began losing economic ground, and last year,
its GDP amounted to just 65% of US GDP. Perhaps recognizing that the
economic foundations underpinning their political ambitions are growing
shakier, Chinese leaders are now lowering their diplomatic profile and
seeking to improve relations with the West.

While China's decline is inevitable, it will be gradual, and China will
remain the world's second- or third-largest economy for decades to come.
Developing economies should not expect China to be their economic savior,
but they can still benefit from cooperation with China - if debt is managed
properly. Similarly, China cannot build a credible new world order, but its
cooperation is essential to enable the US to uphold global stability. China
has plenty of reason to embrace such cooperation: if the existing order
collapses, China's position in whatever replaces it will be even less
favorable.

PS: You recently  <https://x.com/fuxianyi/status/1823879531544846604> posted
that many failures of Chinese policy - not least the "demographic time bomb"
that was the one-child policy - are rooted in the fact that the "Chinese
government's decision-making process remains shrouded in secrecy." While
China certainly keeps much from outsiders - as you
<https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/28/opinion/chinese-economy-yi-fuxian.html>
learned firsthand in campaigning against the one-child policy - the scale of
secrecy within China's government is more difficult to assess. Are Chinese
authorities reliably operating on the basis of accurate information? To what
extent could official secrecy contribute to strategic and economic
miscalculations in the coming years?

YF: Fertility rules exemplify the fatal flaw in China's decision-making
process.

The one-child policy was implemented nationwide in 1980, after scholars,
such as the aerospace engineer Song Jian, gave China's leaders a "scientific
basis" for  <https://rmrb.online/simple/?t533325.html> predicting that,
without population control, the Chinese population would exceed 4.2 billion
by 2080. In reality, China's population would have peaked at roughly
<https://onwisconsin.uwalumni.com/great-fall-of-china/> 1.6 billion, then
gradually declined - meaning that no population-control policy was
necessary. But the country's leaders did not want to hear that: criticism of
the one-child policy was strictly forbidden. It took me several years of
<https://issuu.com/uwequilibrium.com/docs/eq_volume_13_spread_/s/22293088>
relentless effort to get my message heard.

That message - conveyed in a series of articles, reports, and a book
<https://strongwindhk.com/product/9789889972530/>  published between 2000
and 2007 - was that, even if population controls were abolished, the
fertility rate would fall from 1.95 in 2006 to 1.47 in 2023, with the
population peaking at less than 1.4 billion. My predictions proved
prescient, but the Chinese authorities banned my book, because its argument
clashed with official predictions
<http://www.nhc.gov.cn/guihuaxxs/s3585u/201502/c62a5d1a5ad54ea3b4b268777d3ae
6ff.shtml>  that the fertility rate would stabilize at 1.8 under the
one-child policy, and that the population would peak at 1.5 billion by 2033.

By 2012, China's leaders had little choice but to consider loosening
fertility rules, so I was invited to produce a 50,000-word internal report
on the topic. And in 2013, a new edition of my book was published
<https://archive.nytimes.com/sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/11/04/china-o
ne-child-policy-book-fuxian-yi/>  by a publisher under the Chinese State
Council. But my prediction - that a two-child policy could only temporarily
boost the fertility rate to 1.4, with it then falling to 1.0 in 2026 - again
clashed with the forecasts of official demographers. They argued (absurdly)
that loosening the rules slightly would cause births to explode far beyond
the limit, increasing
<http://politics.people.com.cn/n/2013/1117/c1001-23564443.html>  the
fertility rate to 4.4-4.5 births per woman, with 47-50 million births per
year <https://rkyj.ruc.edu.cn/CN/abstract/abstract3271.shtml> .

So, the Chinese authorities rejected my advice to abolish population
control, introducing
<https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666933123000497>  the
two-child policy selectively in 2014 and universally in 2016. But they did
not stop there: hey also blocked
<https://archive.nytimes.com/sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/11/04/china-o
ne-child-policy-book-fuxian-yi/>  the long-delayed publication of my book.
More than a dozen publishing houses, including one affiliated with the
Policy Research Office of the Communist Party's Central Committee, have
tried to publish my books, but none has been able to get approval from the
Chinese authorities.

But, again, it soon became clear that ignoring and suppressing information
does not make it less true. When the two-child policy came into effect in
January 2016, annual births were expected
<http://www.lib.swu.edu.cn/opac/book/7791405>  to peak at 21.9 million in
2018, and fall to 15.5 million by 2023. But even official data
<http://www.nhc.gov.cn/mohwsbwstjxxzx/tjtjnj/202106/04bd2ba9592f4a70b78d80ea
50bfe96e.shtml>  show that there were only 13.6 million births in 2018, and
those figures are grossly inflated. I was placed under investigation for
several months in 2017 for pointing out
<https://www.ft.com/content/bb91ae64-3fc2-11e7-82b6-896b95f30f58>  that
Chinese government overstates fertility figures. And when I reported
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/01/17/world/asia/china-population-
crisis.html> , in 2019, that China's population had already started
declining, rather than by 2031 as officially predicted, China's most
authoritative news portal, People's Daily, ranked my statement third in its
list of the "top ten rumors
<http://society.people.com.cn/n1/2020/0103/c1008-31533810.html.> " of the
year. Soon, however, the Chinese authorities were forced, yet again, to face
reality - or, at least, some version of it - reporting
<https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/chinas-population-declines-first-time-de
cades-rcna65928>  in 2022 that the population had indeed begun to decline.

China's population figures have been tampered with for so many decades that
no one - not even President Xi Jinping - knows the real numbers. Small
wonder, then, that the authorities still have not recognized the severity of
the demographic crisis and abolished population controls. In 2021, when the
three-child policy was introduced, China's leaders were still more afraid of
a 1950s-style <http://paper.ce.cn/pad/content/202201/19/content_228984.html>
population explosion than population aging and shrinking. In 2023, there
were only 9.02
<https://www.reuters.com/world/china/chinas-population-drops-2nd-year-raises
-long-term-growth-concerns-2024-01-17/>  million births in China, reflecting
a fertility rate of just 1.0.

The Chinese government's penchant for selecting data it wants to believe,
and obscuring unfavorable data, has also had consequences for the economy
<https://time.com/6961199/us-china-economy/> , public health
<https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cd9qjjj4zy5o> , and defense
<https://www.rfa.org/english/news/china/china-xi-legacy-10192024230723.html>
. At times, the government conceals unfavorable or politically sensitive
information: for example, youth-unemployment figures were not published
<https://apnews.com/article/china-youth-unemployment-slowdown-321cd96377ee06
6915fc39232b9477c3#:~:text=The%20statistics%20bureau%20stopped%20publishing,
years%20of%20pandemic%2Dera%20isolation.>  for several months in 2023. Other
times, the authorities refuse
<https://www.reuters.com/world/china/chinas-attempts-lift-confidence-economy
-fall-flat-2024-01-24/>  to acknowledge worrisome trends or data. Recently,
the prominent economist Gao Shanwen was investigated
<https://www.wsj.com/world/china/xi-jinping-muzzles-chinese-economist-who-da
red-to-doubt-gdp-numbers-2a2468ef>  and severely punished for questioning
China's official economic data. Before long, China's actual economic
performance will be as difficult to discern as its demographic situation.


<https://www.project-syndicate.org/columnist/yi-fuxian>

Yi Fuxian <https://www.project-syndicate.org/columnist/yi-fuxian>

Yi Fuxian, a senior scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison,
spear-headed the movement against China's one-child policy and is the author
of Big Country with an Empty Nest
<https://www.abebooks.com/Big-Country-Empty-NestChinese-Edition-XIAN/1109033
6926/bd>  (China Development Press, 2013), which went from being banned
<https://archive.nytimes.com/sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/11/04/china-o
ne-child-policy-book-fuxian-yi/>  in China to ranking first
<http://culture.people.com.cn/n/2013/1220/c172318-23899848.html>  in China
Publishing Today's 100 Best Books of 2013 in China.


Make the world great again, and America smaller - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

 Lei das Consequências Involuntárias: a guerra tarifária de Trump contra a China está acelerando a internacionalização da manufatura chinesa, primordialmente no Sudeste Asiático, mas crescentemente também na África e na América Latina. Ou seja, os EUA que admitiram a China no Gatt-OMC um quarto de século atrás, estão fazendo a China ficar Great Again, crescendo para fora, e diversificando para dentro, com deslocamento de mão de obra para novas atividades ligadas ao consumo doméstico, exatamente o que a China precisava fazer. 

Thanks Mister Trump, you are great!

sexta-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2025

80 Anos do Brasil na ONU: a história da diplomacia e de uma vida - Paulo Roberto de Almeida (Ateliê de Humanidades)

80 Anos do Brasil na ONU: a história da diplomacia e de uma vida

  

Paulo Roberto de Almeida, diplomata, professor.

Publicado pelo Ateliê das Humanidades (31/01/2025; link: https://ateliedehumanidades.com/2025/01/31/80-anos-do-brasil-na-onu-a-historia-da-diplomacia-e-de-uma-vida/); disponível na plataforma Academia.edu (link: https://www.academia.edu/127389171/4826_80_Anos_do_Brasil_na_ONU_a_hist%C3%B3ria_da_diplomacia_e_de_uma_vida_2025_).

  

Sumário: 

Introdução: da ordem mundial do segundo pós-guerra à desordem atual

O Brasil, presente na criação da ordem mundial contemporânea

Uma trajetória voltada para o estudo e a análise das relações internacionais

O Brasil na ONU durante a Guerra Fria: o desenvolvimento, no lugar da geopolítica imperial

Rupturas na diplomacia: o lulopetismo e o bolsonarismo na política externa

O Brasil na ONU e nas relações regionais na redemocratização da Nova República

O Brasil em face da fragmentação do multilateralismo e da segunda Guerra Fria

Uma relação sumária de minha produção intelectual

 

 

Introdução: da ordem mundial do segundo pós-guerra à desordem atual

    A Organização das Nações Unidas era considerada, até a emergência, confirmada, de uma “segunda Guerra Fria”, como o eixo central do multilateralismo contemporâneo, atualmente sendo abalada por novas fricções geopolíticas derivadas de uma fragmentação da atuação das instituições multilaterais e pela ascensão de potências desafiadoras da ordem mundial reconhecidamente ocidental criada nos estertores da Segunda Guerra Mundial, nomeadamente a Rússia e a China. As tensões derivadas da vontade do neoczar Vladimir Putin de confirmar a preeminência imperial russa no seu entorno imediato (e mais além) e da pretensão do líder chinês Xi Jinping de unificar a RPC antes do final de seu terceiro mandato à frente da grande nação asiática, em 2027, estão alimentando um cenário de enfrentamentos localizados e generalizados entre as grandes potências, marginalizando o papel da ONU como cenário ideal para debates em torno das questões relevantes da governança global e comprometendo o futuro da cooperação multilateral em temas de paz e segurança, assim como nas demais vertentes do multilateralismo, sobretudo economia e direitos humanos. 

        No presente texto pretendo adotar um enfoque pessoal na análise sintética dos oitenta anos decorridos desde o surgimento da organização sucessora da frustrada Liga das Nações, a fundadora original do multilateralismo contemporâneo, e sobre o papel do Brasil nesse longo itinerário de construção de uma ordem global menos dominada pelo direito da força e mais influenciada pela força do Direito, como eram as expectativas criadas na conjuntura do final do maior conflito mundial, agora temporariamente substituídas pelo que se denominou, de forma imprecisa, como uma “segunda Guerra Fria”. Como se desempenhou a diplomacia do Brasil nesse período bastante prometedor, mas agora preocupante, em face de ameaças, antes impensáveis, de uso de armamento nuclear para “resolver” conflitos resultando de ambições expansionistas de um poder que se colocou à margem do Direito Internacional, violador dos próprios princípios que guiaram a construção da ordem mundial atualmente fraturada? Quais são os desafios que se colocam à política externa do Brasil nesse novo contexto de fraturas na ordem mundial que ela ajudou a criar nos seus primórdios, mas sempre com uma perspectiva crítica com respeito de suas insuficiências e deficiências quanto ao desenvolvimento?

(...)

Ler na íntegra, com a correção do segundo parágrafo (No presente texto pretendo...), neste link: 

https://www.academia.edu/127389171/4826_80_Anos_do_Brasil_na_ONU_a_hist%C3%B3ria_da_diplomacia_e_de_uma_vida_2025_

Anexo: 

1568. “As relações internacionais do Brasil numa era de fragmentação geopolítica”, Interação com o Ateliê das Humanidades (https://ateliedehumanidades.com/o-atelie-de-humanidades/), com a participação de André Magnelli, Lucas Fayal Soneghet e Paulo Martins, em 22/01. Disponível em 27/01/2025 no YouTube (https://youtu.be/wze6Rw3rPyE) e no (Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/553PSG4fE9txXGjI1pHin4?si=15775e7121dd4bc6); disponível no blog Diplomatizzando (27/01/2025; link: https://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com/2025/01/as-relacoes-internacionais-do-brasil_27.html). Relação de Originais n. 4834.


A Fools Paradise: Thomas Friedman and the Middle East - Melvin Goodman Counterpunch

 A Fools Paradise: Thomas Friedman and the Middle East

Melvin Goodman

Thomas Friedman, New York Times columnist and author in the newspaper’s Washington, DC bureau.
Counterpunch, January 31, 2025

https://www.counterpunch.org/2025/01/30/a-fools-paradise-thomas-friedman-and-the-middle-east/

“I am convinced that Bibi understands…that by significantly weakening Hezbollah and Iran, he has helped set in motion the possibility for Lebanon and Syria to restore their sovereignty and unity. I think he is ready to complete Israel’s withdrawal [from Lebanon] and finalize the border….”
– Thomas Friedman, “How Trump Can Remake the Middle East,” New York Times, January 21, 2025,
Thomas Friedman, the New York Times’ most influential columnist, has comprehensively recorded his dreamscape for the Middle East. It tells Donald Trump that “you have a chance to reshape this region in ways that could fundamentally enhance the peace and prosperity of Israelis, Palestinians and all the region’s people, as well as the national security interests of America.” Friedman believes that Benjamin Netanyahu is “ready to complete Israel’s withdrawal and finalize the border” with Lebanon, and that the United States has an “enormous opportunity to truly end the civil war [in Lebanon] and put the country back together.” Finally, he produces a threat: Iran’s nuclear program and malign regional strategy need to be eliminated, and if Trump can’t do this through “peaceful negotiations,” it needs to be “done kinetically.” That’s right: Friedman is willing to commit the United States to a war against Iran.
Friedman’s dreamscape for the Middle East makes no sense on any level. Even former secretary of state Antony Blinken eventually recognized that Israel has “systematically undermined the capacity and legitimacy of the only viable alternative to Hamas, the Palestinian Authority.” What has happened to Friedman’s concerns about Netanyahu have no political solutions for Gaza on the “Day After” the fighting stopped.
Israel is expanding official settlements and nationalizing land on the West Bank at a “faster clip than at any time in the last decade, while turning a blind eye to an unprecedented growth in illegal outposts,” according to Blinken. The attacks by extremist settlers on Palestinians, moreover, “have reached record levels.” Friedman believes that the Jewish supremacists in Netanyahu’s cabinet are responsible for this aggression, but significant evidence points to Netanyahu himself as supporting these actions.
Friedman believes that Netanyahu is ready to withdraw from the border with Lebanon even as Israeli Defense Forces are ignoring the so-called cease fire agreement and continuing to bomb Lebanese villages. On the very day that Israel was to withdraw from southern Lebanon, IDF forces killed at least 22 Lebanese civilians and injured more than 100. The withdrawal agreement was fragile from the start, with no monitoring mechanism in place and no definition of what constitutes a violation of the agreement.
Netanyahu simply has no faith in the ability of the Lebanese Army to stymie the resurgence of Hezbollah in southern Lebanon. Lebanon itself is a failed state, and there are no indications that Israel is preparing to withdraw its forces. Meanwhile, the right-wing Israeli defense minister, Israel Katz, has warned that, if there is a resumption of fighting, Israeli strikes would no longer differentiate between Hezbollah and the Lebanese state. That should come as no surprise as Israeli governments since the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in1982 have made no effort to protect Lebanese sovereignty. Nor has the IDF moved to disable the six military bases built in recent months in southern Lebanon.
If Donald Trump had any interest in a solution to the crisis between Israel and the Palestinians, he never would have stated that he wanted to “clean out” Gaza by transferring some of its population to Egypt and Jordan. I’m sure that Trump has no concern with the war crimes that would be committed to “clean out” Gaza. Nor I’m sure does he understand the “nakba” or catastrophe in 1948, when Israel began its policy of displacing Palestinians whose families had resided for hundreds of years in Palestine.
I’m also sure that moderate Arab leaders who might have worked with the United States to find a political solution realize that Trump has no understanding of the deep differences within the Arab community regarding a peaceful settlement. But Arab leaders do agree that a solution cannot include a resettlement that would destabilize their own fragile governments. Trump’s efforts to get Egypt and Jordan to take in more than a million Palestinians is not just one of the mistakes that he has made in less than two weeks in the White House. In fact, it may be his biggest mistake thus far; it’ll remind people of Trump’s Muslim ban in the first few months of his first term.
Friedman’s apparent support of war against Iran, meanwhile, is his biggest mistake. Iran is now more vulnerable than at any time since the war with Iraq in the 1980s. It has lost its “axis of resistance” (Hamas, Hezbollah, and Syria) to counter the regional influence of the United States and Israel. Iran could decide to weaponize its decades-old nuclear program, but it seems more interested in pursuing a comprehensive dialogue with the United States to get an end to the sanctions that have devastated Iran’s economy. Unfortunately, Trump has stocked his government with militarists who favor a kinetic approach to the problem of Iran as does Friedman.
Ironically, Friedman has ignored the one step that Trump has taken that would augur for a more moderate approach to the Middle East as far as U.S. involvement is concerned. In a step that has been totally ignored by the mainstream media, Trump has named Michael DiMino as the Assistant Secretary of Defense for the Middle East. Not exactly a household name, DiMino has been skeptical regarding the close ties between the United States and Israel, and rejects the notion that the United States has “vital or existential” interests in the Middle East. He favors the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq and Syria, and he believes that Washington’s two primary interests in the region—energy resources and combatting terrorism—are exaggerations. The fact that pro-Israel Republicans as well as Israel itself object to this appointment is noteworthy. So perhaps Trump may consider ideas about the Middle East that are new and different.

Melvin A. Goodman is a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy and a professor of government at Johns Hopkins University. A former CIA analyst, Goodman is the author of Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall of the CIA and National Insecurity: The Cost of American Militarism. and A Whistleblower at the CIA. His most recent books are “American Carnage: The Wars of Donald Trump” (Opus Publishing, 2019) and “Containing the National Security State” (Opus Publishing, 2021). Goodman is the national security columnist for counterpunch.org

François Dosse. A saga dos intelectuais franceses 1944-1989. Volume II: O futuro em migalhas (1968-1989) - Resenha

 Resenhas • Tempo soc. 36 (02) • May-Aug 2024 • https://doi.org/10.11606/0103-2070.ts.2024.221782 linkcopiar

François Dosse. A saga dos intelectuais franceses 1944-1989. Volume II: O futuro em migalhas (1968-1989). São Paulo, Estação Liberdade, 2023.

Dosse, François. A saga dos intelectuais franceses 1944-1989. Volume II: O futuro em migalhas (1968-1989). São Paulo: Estação Liberdade, 2023

O “Maio de 68” francês é daqueles acontecimentos que delimitam um antes e um depois. Avaliações distintas à parte, poucos questionam o fato de que o evento significou uma bifurcação não apenas na história política como também nas cenas cultural e intelectual do país europeu - para não falar de suas ressonâncias globais. Em um país que, desde o chamado “caso Dreyfus”, no final do século XIX, quando Émile Zola e outros escritores e acadêmicos se insurgiram contra o processo fraudulento e antissemita que mirava o capitão de origem judaica, ficou conhecido como a pátria dos intelectuais, o impacto não poderia deixar de ser profundo.

Traçar um quadro das consequências intelectuais subsequentes a este “acontecimento-ruptura” é o principal objetivo de François Dosse em O futuro em migalhas (1968-1989), segundo volume de A saga dos intelectuais franceses 1944-1989. Especialista em história intelectual, autor de uma monumental História do estruturalismo, dentre outros trabalhos na área, Dosse apresenta, em O futuro em migalhas, uma visão de conjunto da vida intelectual francesa entre o estrondo de 1968 e a explosão de 1989, simbolizada na queda do Muro de Berlim.

O resultado é uma obra fascinante, em especial pela capacidade do autor de estabelecer “semelhanças de família” entre autores e textos que, embora distintos entre si, compartilham do mesmo espírito do tempo. É assim que Dosse vai descortinando as principais tendências que se sucederam no centro do espaço intelectual francês: do estruturalismo posto sob suspeita após 68, passando pelo breve interlúdio, até 1974, em que se observa a ascensão do marxismo e dos grupos políticos à esquerda do PCF (trotskistas, maoístas, libertários), pela reação antitotalitária desencadeada pela publicação de O arquipélago Goulag, de Alexander Soljenítsin (1974), pelo retorno matizado da ação e da reflexividade dos sujeitos nos anos 1980, até a defesa sem complexos de valores “ocidentais” como a democracia e/ou os direitos humanos nas décadas de 1980 e de 1990.

Mas, como sói ocorrer, a ambição não deixa de cobrar seu preço. Se a explicação convence no atacado, quer dizer, quando define a relação mais geral entre os textos e seus contextos, mais questionável é a abordagem do autor das diversas mediações entre os níveis “internos” e “externos” do processo de produção das ideias. O risco, aqui, é o de fazer dos textos mera expressão de uma época que os engloba, neles enxergando apenas aquilo que confirma o esquema histórico-intelectual pressuposto.

Não é o que pretende Dosse, cuja perspectiva almeja ultrapassar a “alternativa enganosa” entre texto e contexto, de maneira a pensar “os dois polos em conjunto” (p. 18). Nesse sentido, escreve ele, “é vão considerar uma crônica que parasse no limiar das obras, à margem de sua interpretação, que privilegiasse apenas as manifestações históricas e sociais da vida intelectual” (p. 18). Uma coisa, porém, é o que se diz que será feito, outra é o que se faz.

A história reconstituída por Dosse é conhecida. Os anos 1960 se abriram sob a égide do questionamento estruturalista à hegemonia do marxismo, alavancada a partir do pós-guerra. Jean-Paul Sartre, então o principal representante do intelectual total à francesa, do intelectual que se mete onde deve e onde não deve, vai cedendo lugar a nomes como Michel Foucault, para quem o filósofo marxista-existencialista era um grande autor do século XIX!

Mas eis que sobreveio a irrupção de 1968, pouco depois de um jornalista (Pierre Viansson-Ponté, 1968) vaticinar, no Le Monde, que a França estava entediada com a mesmice reinante. Os acontecimentos entre março e junho de 1968 embaralharam o tabuleiro intelectual e político francês. De um lado, puseram um freio na ascensão estruturalista, demonstrando que, de fato, não são as estruturas que saíram às ruas, para lembrar uma provocação da época. De outro, deram novo fôlego, ainda que a contratempo, ao marxismo engajado não apenas de Sartre, senão também de grupos de extrema-esquerda vinculados ao trotskismo, ao maoísmo ou ao autonomismo autogestionário.

O próprio Foucault, aliás, aproximou-se momentaneamente da nebulosa maoísta no pós-68. Enquanto isso, o PCF, outrora imponente, se deparava com o esgotamento da reserva de legitimidade do “Partidos dos Resistentes”, em referência ao seu papel na luta contra a ocupação nazista. Uma mudança tectônica estava em curso, mas seus desdobramentos ainda permaneciam limitados, até que ganharam vazão inaudita em 1974, com o “efeito Soljenítsin”.

É verdade que já havia algum tempo que a União Soviética não fazia mais parte do horizonte de expectativas de parcelas expressivas da esquerda intelectual e/ou política, incluindo Sartre, que se afastara do PCF (do qual era “companheiro de estrada”) por ocasião da invasão da liderança soviética na Hungria, em 1956. No mesmo ano paradigmático de 1968, além do papel tímido e vacilante do PCF nos acontecimentos de maio, a repressão pelas forças do Pacto de Varsóvia da “primavera de Praga”, na Tchecoslováquia, entornou ainda mais o caldo da desilusão.

Mas nada seria comparável, na França, à avalanche precipitada a partir de 1974. A publicação do livro de Soljenítsin serviu como ponta de lança de um novo tema que se tornaria a próxima obsessão dos intelectuais franceses, signo da virada em curso: o totalitarismo. De agora em diante, são os críticos do totalitarismo - cujo alvo era a União Soviética, é claro, mas também o PCF e, para alguns, o marxismo em geral, quando não a própria tradição revolucionária francesa, como no caso de François Furet - que tomam a frente da cena. É o momento da consagração de Raymond Aron, celebrado por ter, ainda em 1955, ou seja, em plena hegemonia comunista/sartreana, pregado no deserto contra o marxismo, o verdadeiro “ópio dos intelectuais” (Aron, 1955).

Mesmo a esquerda intelectual já distante do comunismo oficial não passaria incólume ao vendaval antitotalitário. Não são poucos os intelectuais que se distanciaram em definitivo do horizonte marxista, num momento em que o PCF realinhava suas forças em torno do “Programa Comum” com um Partido Socialista revitalizado após o congresso de Épinay, em junho de 1971. Observava-se, assim, um inédito divórcio entre a esquerda política hegemônica e a esquerda intelectual, divórcio que, como mostra François Dosse, nem mesmo a vitória de François Mitterrand (PS) nas eleições presidenciais de 1981 logrou reverter. A situação era muito diferente daquela da vitória da Frente Popular, em 1936, que contou com a adesão entusiasta dos intelectuais.

Nos anos 1980, a virada parecia consolidada. Mais do que o “totalitarismo” soviético, questionava-se agora o próprio horizonte de expectativas que dá sustentação às utopias revolucionárias, com as quais os intelectuais franceses serão acusados de cumplicidade. Em outras palavras: é toda a linhagem dos intelectuais franceses “engajados”, de Zola a Sartre, que é posta em causa, de onde a dimensão da mudança em curso, tanto mais significativa porque protagonizada por figuras muitas vezes oriundas das esquerdas, quer seja do PCF, do maoísmo ou, em menor medida, do trotskismo. Era a mutação do intelectual soixante-huitard, ora mobilizado na exorcização do acontecimento ou, ao menos, na sua domesticação.

Quando tem lugar a queda do Muro de Berlim, em 1989, com o início do fim do socialismo burocrático na União Soviética e no leste europeu, o cenário já estava, portanto, bem adaptado à nova atmosfera intelectual e política - o que não diminui, bem entendido, o impacto do acontecimento. No limite, os anos 1990 intensificam a tendência ventilada na década anterior a respeito do bloqueio das esperanças em um futuro qualitativamente distinto do presente, aspiração vista como irresponsável e como caminho para o totalitarismo. É um novo regime de historicidade que emerge, atingindo em cheio a vida intelectual francesa.

Na ausência de futuro, e com o passado se tornando peça de museu, o presente reina absoluto, um presente dilatado diante do qual não há mais alternativas totalizantes. A fixação no aqui e agora encurta o horizonte de expectativas, impossibilitando o seu descolamento do espaço de experiências, o que bloqueia a relação com a temporalidade histórica que, segundo Reinhart Koselleck (1993), caracteriza a modernidade. Não por acaso, como mostra Dosse, os anos 1980 e 1990 verão proliferar reflexões intelectuais sobre o “fim”: da modernidade, do progresso, ou mesmo da história, como no caso de Francis Fukuyama. É por isso que, se o primeiro volume de A saga dos intelectuais franceses, dedicado ao período entre 1944 e 1968, é intitulado À prova da História (Dosse, 2021), o segundo é designado O futuro em migalhas (Dosse, 2023). O contraste não poderia ser maior.

No final das contas, François Dosse nos entrega um trabalho de fôlego, entre cujos méritos está uma abordagem para a qual as ideias não nascem e se desenvolvem num espaço abstrato, envolvendo-se, antes, numa trama complexa em que respondem, cada qual à sua maneira, aos desafios impostos pela época. Dosse acerta, por exemplo, ao tratar os desdobramentos intelectuais mais imediatos de “maio de 68”. Ele se recusa a tomar o acontecimento como mera alavancagem de um processo que já estava em curso, marcado pela passagem do estruturalismo ao pós-estruturalismo. “Maio de 68” garante sobrevida ao marxismo antistalinista, mostrando que, se uma tendência de fundo estava de fato em movimento, a sua dinâmica concreta era muito mais acidentada.

A apreciação se torna menos favorável, porém, quando examinados os contornos mais precisos da periodização apresentada pelo autor, em particular no que se refere ao modo como ele encaminha o argumento, privilegiando autores que melhor se adequem à sua periodização geracional, em detrimento daqueles que nela não encontram lugar. Com efeito, Dosse toma como inevitáveis e, mais, como desejáveis as mudanças operadas a partir da segunda metade da década de 1970, inscrevendo-se na onda de valorização de perspectivas intelectuais e políticas de médio alcance, cujo contentamento com os limites das democracias ocidentais se tornava imperativo.

De fato, essa é a linhagem hegemônica, mas ela não anula por completo a emergência de um novo pensamento crítico que, ao invés de se colocar na posição de “guardião do templo”, tira consequências dos acontecimentos acima mencionados a fim de buscar novas saídas que não se circunscrevam aos ditames da democracia liberal e, no mesmo passo, que recusem o flerte com qualquer forma autoritária de socialismo. É uma perspectiva minoritária, evidentemente, mas relevante. Dosse faz referência aqui e ali a alguns dos seus expoentes, como Daniel Bensaïd ou, sobretudo, Cornelius Castoriadis. Entretanto, pouco desenvolve a respeito.

É como se, para reforçar a trajetória dominante estabelecida, Dosse precisasse subvalorizar as margens sem as quais, aliás, o centro não é o que é. Ainda assim, se nos oferece uma espécie de história “oficial” da intelectualidade francesa, o autor nem por isso nos impede de, em contraste comparativo, pensar o que seria uma história subterrânea da vida intelectual do país europeu entre as décadas de 1960 e 1990. Aqui talvez esteja a principal qualidade do livro ora resenhado: ele pode ser lido e bem aproveitado num sentido diferente ao dos argumentos do autor. Em face do oficial, o marginal. Do hegemônico, o emergente. Eis, portanto, para um lado ou para o outro, um livro indispensável.

Referências Bibliográficas

  • ARON, Raymond. (1955), L’Opium des intellectuels. Paris, Calmann-Lévy.
  • DOSSE, François. (2021), A saga dos intelectuais franceses 1944-1989. Volume I: À prova da História (1944-1968). São Paulo, Estação Liberdade.
  • KOSELLECK, Reinhart. (1993), “‘Espacio de experiencia’ y ‘Horizonte de expectativa’, dos categorías históricas”. In: Futuro pasado. Para una semántica de los tiempos históricos. Barcelona, Paidós, pp. 333-357.
  • SOLJENITSYNE, Alexandre. (1974), L’Archipel du Goulag. Paris, Éditions du Seuil.
  • VIANSSON-PONTÉ, Pierre. (15 mar. 1968), “Quand la France s’ennuie…”. Le Monde, Paris (França), p. 1.

Datas de Publicação

  •  Publicação nesta coleção
    23 Set 2024

 

  •  Data do Fascículo
    May-Aug 2024

 

80 anos do Brasil na ONU, história da diplomacia e de uma vida - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

80 anos do Brasil na ONU, história da diplomacia e de uma vida - Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Introdução de André Magnelli, do Ateliê de Humanidades:

As trajetórias profissionais de longa duração acabam se entrelaçando, em boa parte, com a história do país e do mundo. É o caso dos 50 anos de carreira diplomática de Paulo Roberto de Almeida: https://ateliedehumanidades.com/2025/01/31/80-anos-do-brasil-na-onu-a-historia-da-diplomacia-e-de-uma-vida/

Após o programa do Conversas de Ateliê sobre o cenário da política internacional, publicamos hoje as notas do diplomata para uma aula magna de Curso de Admissão à Carreira de Diplomata – CACD (10/01/2025). Como um “espectador engajado” na política externa e na diplomacia brasileira, Paulo Roberto de Almeida apresenta um enfoque pessoal dos oitenta anos de construção do multilateralismo do pós-guerra através do sistema ONU, da qual a diplomacia brasileira foi co-partícipe central, espécie de “sexto membro permanente”.

Em face ao contexto atual de fragmentação do multilateralismo, com a emergência do que alguns chamam de “segunda guerra fria”, Paulo Roberto reconstrói as características da política exterior do país, apresentando, então, o que entende ser as tendências de ruptura da tradição, baseadas, segundo ele, em “desajustes conceituais e erros estratégicos”.

Desejamos, como sempre, uma excelente leitura!

André Magnelli

Fios do Tempo, 31 de janeiro de 2025

Leia: https://ateliedehumanidades.com/2025/01/31/80-anos-do-brasil-na-onu-a-historia-da-diplomacia-e-de-uma-vida/