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In fact, Davos is less a barometer that helps us to understand the deep trends that are shaping the world than a mirror that reflects trendy ideas, worries and perhaps gossip. From formal debates and informal schmoozing with fellow members of the Davos crowd, one gets a sense of who the U.S. establishment favors to win the next presidential election (Hillary Clinton), predictions for the upcoming referendum in Ireland on the European "simplified" treaty (it will be very close), and French President Nicolas Sarkozy's international image (not good).
You do not need to go to Davos for this, but in the Swiss mountains these ideas acquire an aura of legitimacy -- call it the "I-was-told-in-Davos" imprimatur -- which explains why political and economic analysts and commentators keep coming back, despite the forum's combination of pomposity and intellectual vacuity. The eminent people who pass through are given opportunities only for sound bites, not for developed thoughts.
As for business leaders, despite the hefty fees they must pay to become members of the "Davos Family," they too keep coming because for them the forum ultimately represents a time- and money-saving investment. Where else in the world could they meet so many of their potential partners or customers, including heads of emerging states, in one place?
Of course, the danger of Davos lies in this concentrated commingling of the chattering classes with the real world of politics and business. Conformism flows naturally from these encounters and creates a world in which everybody tends to think alike, as if a truly global community could create a global way of thinking, even if positions on how to address the current financial crisis are varied.
What is trendy at Davos this year is to view the crisis as reflecting the declining clout of the United States. After the war in Iraq and Washington's slow reaction to Hurricane Katrina, the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis is perceived by many as simply accelerating the irresistible rise of Asia and the shift from a unipolar to a multipolar world, even if the wider financial crisis will equally affect Asia's growth.
For countries like China or India, the scaling down of growth from 8 percent to 5 percent is nearly the equivalent of a recession in the West. Yesterday, when the United States sneezed, the world caught a cold. Today, when the United States catches pneumonia, can Asia only sneeze?
The second trend underlined at Davos is the return of the state. In the latest issue of Foreign Affairs, the World Economic Forum's founder and president, Klaus Schwab, asks, "How can business help save the world?" But with the financial crisis hanging over Davos participants' heads like the sword of Damocles, the question is becoming, "Can states and international institutions save business?"
The return of the state, even when it is the power of the European Commission to sanction Microsoft, is the issue on everyone's lips. Such a return further underlines a growing skepticism about the market and its key actors' infectious and dangerous greed.
This trend, if it is confirmed by reality, could signify the end of what Davos stands for -- an open, global and transparent world. But is the world ready for a return to protectionist policies and nationalist reflexes? Will today's freedom and transparency, having led to undesired results, result in a return to restrictions on movements of goods, people and capital?
In Davos this year, great hopes have given way to great apprehensions. How can you pretend to be acting to change the world if you no longer understand it?
Dominique Moisi, a founder and senior advisor at the French Institute for International Relations, is currently a professor at the College of Europe in Natolin, Warsaw. ?© Project Syndicate.
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