The new world order is here, and neoliberalism is dead

Posted on

The world order is changing. Military power no longer guarantees victory, economic warfare is replacing invasion, and identity politics is proving stronger than force. In this video, I explain why the old assumptions of geopolitics — that superpowers always win, that regime change can be imposed from outside, that missiles settle disputes — are collapsing before our eyes.

Russia cannot defeat Ukraine despite its overwhelming military power. Iran is standing up to US foreign policy and outlasting the bombardment. Israel's regional dominance faces an uncertain future. These aren't isolated events — they represent a fundamental power shift in international relations. War is becoming an economic process, not a military one. Supply chains, resources, and economic resilience now determine who survives. Sanctions and trade are being weaponised by smaller states fighting back, not just by the aggressors who once controlled them.

Meanwhile, soft power in the West has collapsed. Neoliberalism is failing at home — inequality, instability, and domestic discontent in the USA, UK, France, and Germany mean nobody wants to import our political economy model any more. The credibility of Western diplomacy is in freefall. What replaces it? A politics of care, cooperation, and respect — or more chaos. That's the choice we face. This is geopolitics explained honestly, and it matters to every one of us.

This is the audio version:

This is the transcript:


Political economy is shaped by power relationships. That is, in fact, what it studies, and those relationships are now shifting dramatically. The old assumptions that made the world work no longer hold true, but politicians are failing to recognise this change, and that's really worrying me. We are moving into a new era, but are our politicians, commentators, and those who are actually shaping policy in the military and elsewhere, understanding the new world we're entering?

In that new world, military strength no longer guarantees victory. Dominant nations cannot impose outcomes. Wars are increasingly unwinnable. Power is no longer what it was. So what now determines control?

Let's look at the facts. Russia is unable to beat Ukraine. It's lost massive numbers of lives and vast quantities of resources, and there is no decisive outcome to that war as yet. Military dominance has proved insufficient for it to be able to win.

The limits on US military power are also becoming exposed at present. The US has been used to dumping missiles and other bombs onto places like Afghanistan, and Libya, and Syria, and now it's trying to do the same with Iran, where it has done this before, but it's becoming apparent that the technique is no longer working.

Iran is standing up to the assault. More than that, it's actually exposing the weakness in the USA. Iran could outlast the supply of missiles being aimed at it. If it does, the balance of power will shift heavily in Iran's favour.

The US assumes that a short war will always work for it. That is no longer true. What we also do know is that these wars have never truly worked. They've never delivered real regime change. They've only created short-term vacuums of power, and the outcomes have often been deeply unfavourable.

There's another process that's going on at the same time, and that is that Israel is facing the end of its own military certainty. I could remember the Six-Day War in 1967. Israel won. Israel has won every war it's been engaged with since then, and now it's suddenly in a different position. Iran is also exposing Israel. If the USA can't back Israel's assault on Iran with the firepower that is needed to create a victory, Israel is going to suddenly find itself in a totally new political economic situation.

Its assumption of regional dominance might now be challenged. Its military superiority may no longer be decisive. Its strategic limits of power may become increasingly visible, and all of this is happening at the same time as something else is going on.

War is shifting from being a military process to being an economic process. What is becoming very clear in the fight with Iran is that supply chains and resources are now critical to the victory that Iran is seeking. Sanctions and finance as weapons have been used in the past, but they were used by the aggressor against the smaller state. Now the smaller state is finding it can use them and fight back.

The cost of war is now constraining outcomes, and we're seeing this happening in Ukraine, by the way. They have become absolute masters of creating cheap armaments. That is what is holding Russia at bay. In the case of Iran, of course, it is oil, but in either case, economic resilience is determining survival.

Smaller states are, then, refusing to submit to the power that is being thrown at them now, and this is a major change in world thinking. The idea that we have superpowers and they will always determine outcomes has been something that I've lived with all my life, but it's no longer true.

Resistance is being rooted in culture and belief, and we're seeing that in Ukraine. People believe in the country.

In Iran, people believe in the faith.

People are no longer willing to accept the threat of occupation being imposed upon them, when that might mean a regime change with regard to the culture of the country. Identity is therefore proving to be stronger than force in these cases, and this is really important.

Iran proves this. Internal dissent does exist, but external imposition of change is being rejected. There is no appetite in Iran for US-imposed regime change. They've seen what has happened elsewhere. They don't trust Western intentions. Why should they? Legitimacy cannot be imported into a country, and anyway, Western models of neoliberal politics are failing globally. There's massive domestic discontent with them in both the USA and the UK right now, and France and Germany. Everywhere, right-wing and authoritarian politics are rising, and people are seeing this as some sort of indication that what they've got may be what they'll get, and as a consequence, they're no longer persuaded by the idea that the USA coming in with its missiles is also coming in as a saviour. It isn't. Neoliberalism is dead.

The consequence is that military bombardment is losing its effectiveness. Economic warfare is gaining an importance, and identity politics are becoming decisive, and we are failing to take that into account. Legitimacy is replacing coercion. Power is now more complex and diffuse as a result. Internal failures are undermining the external influence of Western countries, and inequality and instability in the West is being seen visibly around the world. The credibility of our model of government is collapsing, and others are therefore unwilling to replicate it.

Soft power has also been severely weakened in the West. Look at the UK. We've undermined the funding of the BBC's World Service. It's hardly surprising that people aren't noticing what we have to say anymore.

There is now no global dominant economic or political model is the point I'm making. This is important because multiple competing forces are now very clearly at play in international political economy, and it's becoming impossible to predict outcomes. High levels of geopolitical instability and genuine uncertainty are now unavoidable when we look at what is happening in the world.

What is going to happen? Well, I don't know. Nobody does. Let's be clear about this. We can only guess, but my feeling is that there's going to be a major shift towards soft power strategies now. Influence will come through culture and economics. Nonviolent tools are going to become central to what is going on in the world. Warfare is going to be downscaled. I'm not going to complain about that. Whilst diplomacy will regain importance, new forms of conflict are emerging, and so will new forms of conflict resolution as a result.

Sanctions, trade and finance tools are going to be a part of this agenda, and the control of resources is obviously going to become strategic, and there will be winners and losers as a result, and they may be far away from the point of the original conflict. That's also important to remember.

Currency and payment systems are going be weaponised.

Economic pressure is going to replace invasion, but limits will still apply.

I come back to the point, ideology is now central to conflict, and one of the things that we've got to accept is that there are now genuine ideological differences, and we are not going to resolve them through conflict. There is no way now that imposed belief systems are going to work in regimes which are imposed upon countries. National and cultural identity will prevent that, and in fact, they will be strengthened by any attempts to undermine them.

Polarisation has driven conflict dynamics to date. Of course it has. The idea that someone is an enemy is what has made it possible to go forward and kill them. That is how we overcome our reservations about doing that. But the point is that things are going to be different in the future. If we're going to respect difference, and we're going to have to, because countries are not going to accept our points of view automatically just because it's been imposed with a gun, we're going to have to be talking about a politics of care. We're going to have to reject dehumanisation of opponents. We're going to have to move beyond “enemy” narratives. We're going to have to emphasise cooperation and respect, and we're going to have to reduce the drivers of conflict.

My point is this: neoliberalism has been exposed in its harshest form. War is revealing the failures of it as a current system of management, of government, of societies, and of the world. Power structures are therefore going to undergo transformation. Change is now inevitable. Old models cannot survive. No one knows what the answers are as yet. Me included. But what I am saying is we now need to address these issues, and that is the next stage of the process.

Recognising the scale of the change underway now is vital. We need to question assumptions about war and power, and we need to engage with new political possibilities. We need to demand a politics based on care.

If you agree, please comment down below. Please share this video and subscribe to our channel. Let us know what you think. It's really important. It shapes how we create future videos.


Poll

What now defines power in today’s world?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

PDF of article


Thanks for reading this post.
You can share this post on social media of your choice by clicking these icons:

There are links to this blog's glossary in the above post that explain technical terms used in it. Follow them for more explanations.

You can subscribe to this blog's daily email here.

And if you would like to support this blog you can, here:

  • Richard Murphy

    Read more about me

  • Support This Site

    If you like what I do please support me on Ko-fi using credit or debit card or PayPal

  • Archives

  • Categories

  • Taxing wealth report 2024

  • Newsletter signup

    Get a daily email of my blog posts.

    Please wait...

    Thank you for sign up!

  • Podcast

  • Follow me

    LinkedIn

    LinkedIn

    Mastodon

    @RichardJMurphy

    BlueSky

    @richardjmurphy.bsky.social