Europe and Germany are entering a decisive decade where energy shocks, industrial decline, and rising NATO defence commitments collide. The EU’s post-2022 pivot away from Russian gas has left industry exposed to higher energy costs, while Germany’s industrial backbone faces relocation and retrenchment. At the same time, NATO’s new 5% of GDP spending pledge forces unprecedented fiscal choices that risk crowding out pensions, healthcare, and social stability. Whether Europe strengthens its competitiveness and integrates defence spending efficiently—or slides into deindustrialization and political unrest—will define its role in the global order to 2045.

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The future of Russian-Chinese relations within BRICS is defined by a strategic convergence: Russia’s pivot eastward after the rupture with Europe and China’s ambition to re-shape global governance. Energy trade, technology cooperation, and financial integration are binding the two powers into a pragmatic partnership, even as underlying asymmetries and competing interests remain. Within BRICS, their coordination strengthens calls for a multipolar world order and accelerates the bloc’s expansion into new markets. Yet the partnership is not without limits—dependence, mistrust, and global headwinds could expose fault lines. The next two decades will test whether BRICS becomes a cohesive platform for alternative global leadership, or merely a loose forum shaped by shifting national priorities.

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