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[EAI Working Paper] Post-COVID World Political Economy Order Series: Planning Intent
The global spread of COVID-19 has plunged the world economy into crisis, followed by shocks such as health and social crises. How are these various crises affecting the world's political and economic order? Is the pandemic accelerating the decline of the liberal international order? Is it exacerbating US-China economic conflict? Where do the differences in crisis response by country come from? Are democratic and capitalist models changing?
The "Post-COVID World Political Economy Order" EAI Working Paper Series brings together the wisdom of nine experts. As crises bring opportunities, this series analyzes changes in political economy from multiple dimensions and proposes response strategies, with the aim of conducting a civilizational review of change and intellectual efforts toward a new order of coexistence.
The publication details and schedule of the report are as follows.
1. Sohn Yeol, Introduction: Post-COVID World Political Economy Order (Published February 8) [View Report]
2. Kim Sang-bae, Digital Platform Competition in the Non-Contact Era: The Complex Geopolitics of US-China Technological Hegemony Competition (Published February 8)[View Report]
3. Lee Seung-ju, US-China Regional Competition and Vaccine Diplomacy in the COVID-19 Era (Published February 8)[View Report]
4. Kim Tae-gyun, US-China Strategic Competition and Changes in the Global South Order (Published February 9)[View Report]
5. Bae Young-ja, The Digital Economy and Changes in Global Value Chains (Published February 9)[View Report]
6. Jung Ju-yeon, The State and Democracy After COVID-19 (Published February 10)[View Report]
7. Lee Wang-hwi, Governance and State Capacity: The Case of China (Published February 10)[View Report]
8. Lee Jung-hwan, Legacies of State-Society Relations and Crisis Response: COVID-19 and Japan (Published February 11)[View Report]
9. Lee Yong-wook, US Economic Response Strategies: Focusing on Monetary Policy (Published February 11)[View Report]
10. Cho Hong-sik, The COVID-19 Crisis and the Transformation of European Integration (Published February 11)[View Report]
*This text is an AI translation of an original written in Korean. Some translations or nuances may be inaccurate.