Il conflitto amplifica il trend al rialzo. Oltre a inflazione, sanzioni e shock di offerta, anche instabilità politica. Si va verso un "gold standard" delle materie prime.
Risultati della ricerca:
Peggiorano le previsioni economiche a causa del conflitto: Pil in calo e inflazione ancora in salita. La BCE potrebbe rimandare la stretta monetaria al 2023.
Il quinto pacchetto di Bruxelles limita fortemente gli scambi di merci da e per la Russia. Le imprese che fanno affari con Mosca dovranno fare i conti con una dura realtà.
La guerra russa contro l'Ucraina va avanti ormai da cinquanta giorni. I negoziati tra Kiev e Mosca, su due track finora, sono iniziati immediatamente il giorno dopo l'invasione. E anche se le posizioni delle parti diventano man mano più chiare, nessun compromesso sembra essere all'orizzonte.
The same day Russia began the invasion of Ukraine, another news went largely unnoticed: the decision to double the EUFOR mission’s personnel to Bosnia-Herzegovina (BiH), whose forces are now up to 1,100. Though the arrangement was settled before the start of the war, it was fuelled by “the deterioration of the security situation internationally” which “has the potential to spread instability to Bosnia-Herzegovina”, as per the EUFOR communiqué.
Russia’s war against Ukraine has dramatically changed not only the life of Ukrainians and Russians, but of Europeans, too. Many things that seemed impossible just before February 24th, 2022 now look more than probable. Among them is Ukraine’s EU membership.
Bosnia and Herzegovina is a small yet complicated country, with a thousand-year history and less than three million citizens. In the post-war period, the country was burdened with corruption, torn by an illogical constitutional order, facing the greatest political crisis after the war and in the midst of monumental global geopolitical shifts. Against this backdrop, the country’s civil society has been largely silent and its role peripheral. What factors might explain this phenomenon?
Its complex federal structure, ethnic-based vetoes, and institutional overkill[1] make Bosnia-Herzegovina (BiH)’s Constitution an exceptional constitutional arrangement. Though its peculiarity is acknowledged by both early and contemporary commentators, current discourse around constitutional changes are less unique, resembling in part populist debates that have emerged on the European stage in recent years.
France heads to the polls for its presidential election as Europe’s political agenda is derailed by the war in Ukraine. Macron is attempting to hold on to power following a harder than expected electoral campaign.