Today we have a much more decentralized economy. And I wonder, especially given the fact that here, you're on the one hand, you have, which is very much, these are the forces of globalization. This is the globalism. And yet we have politics in Europe and the United States, which are populist, which are inward turning, which are moving away from these types of the type of consensus that's required for the type of solution you're describing. So my question is, do you foresee this solution being implementable, either in a sufficient time scale where it doesn't cause massive dislocations that are problematic, significantly problematic, or that it's even implementable at all? Well, it's a really good question, Dimitri. Let me approach it from kind of opposite ends of the spectrum. The first thing you said is that these forces of anti-globalization, nationalism, populism seem to be pulling away from what is, in my view, at least an overly centralized system. Now, it is true that more (82/98)
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