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Economic security

  • People walking on street during night time | © Aleksandr Popov

    Europe's underestimated weak spot: Financial dependence on the US

    European countries are deeply intertwined with the United States financially. But under Trump they can no longer rely on trust, political restraint and legal certainty. Europe must reduce its financial dependence.

    Commentary
    19 January, 2026 By: Steven Everts
  • Close-up of President Xi Jinping with chinese flag in the background. Copyright: European Union, 2025

    Tech war 2.0: The dangers of Trump's 'G2' bargaining with an emboldened China

    Beijing has reshaped the US-China tech war by weaponising critical minerals, forcing Washington to abandon non-negotiable controls in favour of G2-bargaining. Europe now faces growing dependence and exposure to economic coercion, and must reindustrialise with partners to protect...

    Briefs
    16 December, 2025 By: Joris Teer
  • NEO Magnet Factory in Estonia | © NPM Narva, 2025 (EC - Audiovisual Service)

    False sense of security: European complacency on rare earths is the wrong answer to the US-China trade truce

    Talk of a US–China 'trade truce' may lull Europe into a false sense of security. Beijing's export controls on rare earths and critical materials remain disruptive, unpredictable and coercive. Unless the EU accelerates de-risking, its industries and defence sector will stay...

    Commentary
    27 November, 2025 By: Joris Teer
  • Xi Jinping President of the People's Republic of China speak's at a United Nations Office at Geneva. 18 january 2017. UN Photo / Jean-Marc Ferré via UN Geneva Flickr

    Beyond Trump: Xi’s price wars and weaponisation of critical raw materials threaten European prosperity

    Critics blame Europe’s ‘summer of humiliation’ on the EU’s timidity in trade negotiations with President Trump. Yet the greater threat to European prosperity is Beijing’s twin strategy of flooding markets with cheap goods while weaponising supply chains.

    Commentary
    9 October, 2025 By: Joris Teer
  • Stars in the sky. Credit photo: Envato elements

    When stars align: Leveraging European defence budgets to drive a dual-use tech boom

    Europe faces a security and competitiveness crisis. Increased defence spending offers an opportunity to address both challenges, unleashing a dual-use technology boom. Both the EU and its Member States have key roles to play in this effort.

    Briefs
    3 July, 2025 By: Joris Teer, Giuseppe Spatafora
  • Informal meeting of defence ministers. Credit: The Chancellery of the Prime Minister

    European Ministers of Defence - Save Europe, invest in mining!

    Critical materials are the backbone of modern defence. For Europe's rearmament to succeed, the EU defence ministers must break Beijing's chokehold on these essential resources.

    Commentary
    6 June, 2025 By: Joris Teer
  • Industrial machine. Credit photo: Clayton Cardinalli on Unsplash

    Resilience by design: A new EU Foreign Economic Policy to counter global disorder

    The pledge to develop a new foreign economic policy is central to the European Commission’s July 2024 Political Guidelines. This ambition has become even more pressing in light of President Trump’s disruptive ‘America First’ trade practices, and the broader need to increase the...

    Briefs
    15 May, 2025 By: Tim Rühlig, Joris Teer
  • Robotic arms with conveyor line. Credit photo: ©PhonlamaiPhoto's via Canva.com

    To survive Moscow, Beijing, and Washington’s economic onslaught, Europe must reindustrialise

    With the advent of Trump’s tariffs, the EU has once again found itself caught in the crossfire of great power geo-economic ambitions. It must respond by prioritising EU and partner industries, cutting red tape, and boosting energy production.

    Commentary
    14 April, 2025 By: Joris Teer
  • Containers and boats

    A new transatlantic trade and tech agenda: economic security standards can address the EU’s and Washington’s concerns about China

    If the EU does not engage proactively with Washington, the new Trump 2.0 administration may proceed without taking the bloc’s interests into account. Intent on countering Chinese technological and industrial dominance, Trump 2.0 may push Europeans towards a degree of decoupling...

    Commentary
    20 January, 2025 By: Tim Rühlig, Joris Teer
  • commentary_JT_US-elections-series_0

    Outrage is not a policy: The EU should engage Trump’s team to boost industrial capacity outside China and Russia

    EU leaders would be wise to work with Trump 2.0 on reindustrialisation, whatever differences they may have on Ukraine and bilateral trade. The concentration of fighting capability and industrial capacity in the anti-Western axis is the major threat to Europe’s security.

    Commentary
    21 November, 2024 By: Joris Teer

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