In Davos, Antony Blinken warns of the impact on global trade of geopolitical tensions in the Taiwan Strait

“The whole planet” would be affected by a disruption of trade passing through the Taiwan Strait due to its importance for world trade, warned American Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Wednesday January 17. “This is the last thing we need” currently, he told the World Economic Forum in Davos.

It’s about a “very concrete reason” to keep the peace because “Taiwan plays a disproportionate role” its size for the global economy, he said. The island, which China intends to retake, if necessary by force, is at the heart of Sino-American tensions, the United States being the main supplier of arms to the Taiwanese authorities.

“Our interest” East “to ensure the maintenance of peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait” and “any dispute between Taiwan and China be resolved peacefully”pleaded Mr. Blinken. “Many countries have an interest in preserving peace and stability”due to Taiwan’s important place in the global supply of semiconductors. “We are not the only ones to say it” in Beijing, explained the head of American diplomacy.

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Geopolitical tensions

On Saturday, the Taiwanese elected Lai Ching-te as president, who promised to protect the territory from “threats and intimidation” from Beijing. China has described him as a dangerous separatist and threatened his supporters with dire consequences.

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The World Trade Organization (WTO) is also “less optimistic” for world trade this year, declared in Davos its director general, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, invoking in particular “the worsening of geopolitical tensions, the disruptions [observées] in the Red Sea, on the Suez Canal, the Panama Canal ».

At the beginning of October, just before the Hamas attack on Israel, the WTO had already revised its forecasts for 2023 sharply, saying it expected the volume of world trade in goods to increase by only 0, 8%. On the other hand, it expected a rebound to 3.3% this year.

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The World with AFP

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