[ad_1]
There are a few weeks until the polls open in United States, in what promises to be a game that is anything but obvious. Joe bidenDemocratic candidate challenge Donald trump in an electoral round marked by the coronavirus, by the news about the infected president, by the confrontation with China and by Black Lives Matters. Everything seems to suggest that the United States is facing a crossroads that will act as a turning point: whoever wins will find themselves leading a post-global, or rather post-globalization, world marked by the pandemic and the economic crisis that derives from it. The recipes of the happy two are decidedly different. So the face the United States will take after the vote will largely depend on who will be chosen to face the years to come: the politician and politician Garibaldi, or Obama’s moderate former vice president?
About this, and much more, they speak live on the pages of Giornale.it Massimo D’Alema, President of Italianieuropei, Giancarlo Giorgetti, Undersecretary of the League and political scientist Germano Doctors, academic of strategic studies at Luiss Guido Carli. The occasion is the presentation of the book “Post-global America. Trump, the coronavirus and the future” written by Andrew Spannaus, American journalist and analyst president of the Milan Foreign Press Association, with a preface by Giulio Sapelli. The meeting, promoted by Eureca, is moderated by Angelo Polimeno Bottai, deputy director of Tg1 and president of the Association, and technically coordinated by Claudio Verzola. The guests try to dissect the United States that arrives at this appointment after the four years of the Trump administration to explain what we should expect from the next presidency. “The coronavirus shock is accelerating the already ongoing crisis of globalization, which has put monetary parameters and speculation ahead of welfare and the real economy,” the book’s presentation reads. The change inaugurated with the election of Donald Trump requires a realistic analysis, to understand how much will remain of the attempt to reshape production, trade relations and foreign policy. And while the establishment resists populist impulses and defends itself by manipulating information, there are some points that do not back down: it is necessary to rethink the ‘low-cost economy, the role of the state and public debt, and the very concept of national security, everything in the context of new global equilibria ‘.