He bowed. Slowly. With dignity. In doing so, he imitated American President Barack Obama in Shanghai and then again at a meeting on the sidelines of the nuclear security summit in Washington. In front of the unflappable Chinese President Hu Jintao, Nicolas Sarkozy had to silence any potential narcissistic resistance. Ultimately, it hardly matters whether the head of state, on this occasion, donned more presidential attire than usual or if itโs a skillful diplomatic consultation intended to engage China in a logic of tough sanctions against Iran in the upcoming Security Council meeting. Immortalized on the Web like a Doisneau snapshot, this conforming gesture of the two Western leaders signs off, in a manner reminiscent of medical examiners, the death certificate: the end of the โworld of yesterday,โ to plagiarize the elegant and fine description of this ailing Europe, the one between the two wars, by the unforgettable Stefan Zweig.
Let us favor raw realism over painful nostalgia. The center of gravity of the planet, as we know, has inexorably shifted towards Asia, which concentrates the bulk of economic exchanges and could soon host, according to a recent OECD article, 66% of the middle classes. Those through whom the scandal of progressive revolutions arrives. Despite its internal wealthโthree times that of China, as Le Monde reminds usโEurope gives the impression of crashing, with an entirely aristocratic รฉclat, on the mishaps of a single currency: much to the dismay of the Greeks and other Mediterranean peoples, the blessed time of subsidized economies and public generosity is coming to an end. Strong in its obsessive rationality, evidenced by the syntax of its languageโwhen one does not understand a word, it’s enough to dissect it to grasp its meaningโGermany has digested the lessons of its history to serenely assume its leadership in continental Europe. We canโt blame it: โ80% of Germans are satisfied with their jobโ and โ86% of them feel well treated at work by their hierarchy,โ according to a survey conducted by the magazine Stern that must make France Tรฉlรฉcom fantasize. The Rhine becomes almost as wide as the Yangtze. Yet, this is a Pyrrhic victory: Berlin saw its traditional top spot as the world’s leading exporter snatched away in 2010 by Beijing.
Belgium also collapses over linguistic issues, a diluted signifier of an insufficiently attractive societal model. It unanimously votes a law against the Burqa, an ultimate defense mechanism against an inevitable upheaval, a mere delaying maneuver against a deadline energized by underlying forces of disjunction. The fire always starts at the neighbor’s: on this side of the Scheldt, the smoldering fire is rather under the stones thrown at buses. One hesitates to diagnose a similar symptom for France.
Despite the rhythmic succession of increasingly solemn summitsโG7, G7+1, G8, G20, then G2 of ChinAmericaโjuggling with the symbolism of numbers in lieu of being able to curb the global misdeeds of those using them to speculate, one feeling prevails: Keynes and his advocates of tomorrow on establishing external governance necessary for market regulation have definitely lost the game. The desperate vision of the Austrian writerโwhich led him to suicide in 1942โeerily echoes the somber assessment of American biologist Jared Diamond, vigilant chronicler of the โcollapseโ of civilizations. Letโs be Darwinian: those which decline inevitably leave more space for those that emerge.