The latest edition of Eurasia is here!
The latest issue of Eurasia looks at the relationship between Europe and China, the alternative offered by the Belt and Road Initiative, the reasons for the success of education in Asia and other exciting topics. We also feature exclusive interviews with former Czech President Václav Klaus, Barnabas Virág, Deputy Governor of the central bank of Hungary, and Lorenzo Tavazzi of The European House - Ambrosetti.
The latest edition of Eurasia is here!
Geurasia

The latest edition of Eurasia is here!


Eurasia 05/01/2024 20:13

The latest issue of Eurasia looks at the relationship between Europe and China, the alternative offered by the Belt and Road Initiative, the reasons for the success of education in Asia and other exciting topics. We also feature exclusive interviews with former Czech President Václav Klaus, Barnabás Virág, Deputy Governor of the central bank of Hungary, and Lorenzo Tavazzi of The European House - Ambrosetti.

Instead of condemning China, Western Europe should be more concerned with its own affairs, as the EU has ceased to be an independent global political factor, Václav Klaus believes. The former Czech president recently took part in a geopolitical conference at the Danube Institute.

“We need a strong Eurasian cooperation based on mutual benefits,” says Barnabás Virág, Deputy Governor of Magyar Nemzeti Bank, the central bank of Hungary.

Achieving the objectives of green transition requires substantial investment, but it also enables an industrial and technological advantage over a country’s main competitors, with benefits for long-term growth prospects, Lorenzo Tavazzi, Senior Partner and Responsible for the International Department of The European House - Ambrosetti told us on the sidelines of the Budapest Eurasia Forum.

A number of articles focus on EU-China relations:

"Derisking is therefore neither feasible nor in the interests of the EU, but a pure smear campaign against China" - stresses Levente Horváth, Director of the Eurasia Center in his foreword.

Macroeconomist Philip Pilkington discusses how derisking fails to reach its goal, Századvég experts Olivér Hortay and Barna Péterfi point out that anti-China measures have no majority in Europe, while Ágnes Zsófia Magyar (Foundation for a Civic Hungary) writes about Emmanuel Macron's Asia policy.

Click here to read the magazine!

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