
Two recent landmark reports on the European Union's economy paint an unforgiving picture of its vulnerabilities, suggesting the region faces the prospect of "slow agony". At current productivity and demographic trends, Europe's economic output is forecast to be the same in 2050 as it is today.
With much of the power to correct course residing in national capitals, what will it take for leaders to rise to the challenge?
The Centre for Regions, Trade and Geopolitics helps stakeholders shape progress on global and regional priorities within the most complex geopolitical and geo-economic landscape in decades. Global growth is volatile and uneven, with trade and investment patterns undergoing rapid change. We inform business and polic...
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