Opinion piece calls for global governance to reflect new realities

Despite rising international tensions, countries still seek cooperation based on shared interests. An opinion piece in the South China Morning Post argues that multilateral institutions must embrace this trend to address today's economically diffuse, environmentally constrained, and politically fragmented world.

The South China Morning Post published an opinion piece on February 20, 2026, titled 'It’s time for global governance to reflect the new realities.' It states that the current international order was designed for a world shaped by Cold War bipolar rivalry and later sustained by American predominance. However, today's global system looks very different: economically diffuse, environmentally constrained, and politically fragmented but deeply interconnected by both trade and technology.

The article notes that rising populism in Western countries seeks to tear down multilateral structures perceived as holding back national prosperity. Yet multilateral institutions remain anchored in yesterday’s distribution of power, while today’s challenges—climate change, digital fragmentation, supply-chain insecurity, debt distress, and geopolitical rivalry—demand frameworks that reflect contemporary realities. Global governance has struggled to keep pace with these changes.

That old architecture was built for a world of steel, grain, and territorial sovereignty. The system now finds itself confronting problems driven by data flows, artificial intelligence, cross-border platforms, atmospheric physics, and globally integrated capital markets. Governance remains predominantly state-centric, while value creation and systemic risk increasingly transcend borders and sectors.

The piece emphasizes that despite international tensions, countries still seek cooperation based on shared interests, and institutions must embrace this trend. Keywords include Asia, United States, Munich, Canada, Trans-Pacific Partnership, CPTPP, United Nations, United Kingdom, World Trade Organization, China, Greenland, Cold War, European Union, and Nato.

Makala yanayohusiana

A Yomiuri Shimbun editorial on January 1, 2026, stresses that amid ongoing global conflicts, Japan must transition from beneficiary to shaper of the international order. It calls for bolstering intellectual strength, economic and technological power, and communicative abilities to lead in forming a new order for peace and stability.

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In a virtual conversation at the University of Hong Kong’s Centre on Contemporary China and the World, Chinese scholar Wang Jisi warned that the current world order of ‘two superpowers and many strong powers’ faces growing risks of conflict. He voiced concerns about America’s inward turn under US President Donald Trump, Washington’s pursuit of containment in geopolitical and geoeconomic terms, and mounting cross-strait tensions.

U.S. officials' calls for reforming the international order at the Munich Security Conference signal growing importance for Japan-U.S. ties. The Trump administration's 2026 National Defense Strategy offers Japan a chance to deepen its role.

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