After the Liberal Order:
Democratic Erosion, Strategic Independence, and Bayesian Geopolitics of a Fragmented World, 2026–2050
Abstract
The liberal international order no longer operates as a coherent hegemonic project. Evidence from the Varieties of Democracy Institute 2026 Democracy Report indicates that the United States—historically the system’s central guarantor—has experienced a decline in its Liberal Democracy Index described as “unprecedented” for a high-income democracy. Democratic backsliding is no longer episodic but systemic across core G7 states. In parallel, the global trading system has undergone structural rewiring: by the end of 2025, U.S. tariff levels had reached their highest point since the Second World War, displacing more than $165 billion in U.S.–China trade flows, yet without precipitating a contraction in global trade volumes. Instead, trade has reconfigured along geopolitical lines.
Simultaneously, critical minerals have emerged as the principal arena of strategic competition, while artificial intelligence ecosystems are bifurcating into rival governance regimes. This paper applies a Bayesian game-theoretic framework to interpret these transformations, identifying three distinct state “types” operating under conditions of strategic opacity and incomplete information. It argues that, under the 2026 French G7 Presidency, advanced democracies should adopt a posture of structured resilience—eschewing both nostalgic liberal universalism and unconstrained strategic autonomy in favor of calibrated, probabilistic statecraft suited to a fragmented international system.
I. The Decomposition of Liberal Hegemony
I.i. From Universal Project to Competitive Identity
The Liberal International Order (LIO) was never as internally coherent as its post–Cold War proponents assumed. Yet for approximately three decades, it functioned as an effective hegemonic framework: a constellation of institutions, norms, and asymmetric power relations that constrained revisionist behavior while incentivizing participation in rule-based trade, multilateral security arrangements, and democratic governance.
By 2026, however, this architecture has not collapsed in a singular systemic rupture; rather, it has disaggregated into competing components. Liberalism itself has been transformed—from a universalizing project into what may be termed a competitive identity: one political model among several, contending for legitimacy within a fractured, multipolar environment rather than radiating outward from an uncontested center.
The empirical basis for this transformation is now robust. The 2026 Democracy Report produced by the Varieties of Democracy Institute documents that nearly one-quarter of all states are undergoing active autocratization as of 2025. More striking still is the geographic inversion of democratic decline: six of the ten newly identified autocratizing countries are located in Europe and North America. This reversal challenges the foundational assumptions of earlier democratization theory, which implicitly treated advanced industrial democracies as structurally immune to regression.
Among these cases, the United States warrants particular scrutiny. V-Dem records a 24 percent decline in the U.S. Liberal Democracy Index during the first year of the second Trump administration—a rate of deterioration described by Staffan I. Lindberg as without precedent among peer economies. Public perception data reinforces this trajectory. A March 2026 survey conducted by the Pew Research Center found that 68 percent of Americans believe their democracy no longer serves as a global model, while overall dissatisfaction with democratic functioning rose to 69 percent—an increase of seven percentage points within a single year.
The drivers of this erosion are structural rather than cyclical. V-Dem identifies a rapid concentration of executive authority, the politicization of civil service institutions, sustained pressure on judicial independence, and the erosion of protections for free expression and academic autonomy. The 2026 midterm elections are thus positioned as a critical inflection point: should electoral integrity indicators deteriorate alongside already weakened liberal safeguards, the United States’ democratic classification may decline further.
Importantly, this pattern is not uniquely American. Across established democracies, populist movements have successfully executed a wedge strategy that decouples democracy as majoritarian expression from liberalism as a system of institutional constraints and minority protections. The resulting configuration—often described as executive aggrandizement—entails the gradual dismantling of checks and balances by leaders who retain electoral legitimacy while hollowing out its substantive foundations.
Longitudinal evidence underscores the durability of this phenomenon. Research from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace indicates that of twenty-five countries experiencing democratic backsliding since 1990, only four have achieved sustained recovery, and only one—Sri Lanka—has maintained that recovery beyond a five-year horizon. Democratic erosion, once initiated, exhibits strong path dependence.
I.ii. The European Dilemma
Within the G7, European member states confront a compounding set of economic and political pressures that collectively strain the Union’s internal cohesion. Germany, long the industrial anchor of Europe, is experiencing a structural contraction in its manufacturing base, with approximately 10,000 jobs lost per month amid intensifying competition from Chinese producers. A symbolic inflection point has already been reached: for the first time in modern industrial history, Germany imports more automobiles from China than it exports to the Chinese market.
In France, President Emmanuel Macron—as host of the 2026 G7 summit—has publicly warned of deepening trade asymmetries with China, even as he confronts mounting domestic constraints. The far-right National Rally continues to maintain strong polling momentum ahead of the 2027 presidential election, limiting the political space for assertive external economic policy.
The European Union’s emerging response reflects both strategic necessity and evolving internal dynamics. Trade defense instruments are being deployed with increasing frequency, including more assertive use of the Foreign Subsidies Regulation and consideration of formal action against Chinese firms such as BYD operating within the European market. While these measures previously risked exacerbating intra-EU tensions—particularly under the alignment of Hungary with Beijing during the tenure of Viktor Orbán—the recent electoral defeat of Orbán introduces a potential inflection point. A reorientation of Hungarian foreign economic policy could reduce internal resistance to a more unified EU trade posture toward China, though the durability and depth of such a shift remain uncertain and contingent on the policy trajectory of the incoming government.
Parallel to its economic measures, the EU has initiated institutional responses aimed at democratic resilience. The “Democracy Shield” program, launched under Commissioner Michael McGrath in November 2025, seeks to bolster independent journalism, enhance media literacy, and establish a European Centre for Democratic Resilience. Complementing this effort, the Council of Europe has advanced a “New Democratic Pact” linking democratic integrity with collective security across its 46 member states.
These initiatives represent meaningful institutional innovation. However, they operate within a structural context in which the EU’s own political coherence is increasingly contested by the very forces these programs are designed to counter. The European dilemma, therefore, is not merely one of external competition but of internal equilibrium: sustaining democratic integrity while navigating a rapidly shifting geoeconomic landscape.
II. The Rewiring of Global Trade: Geopolitics as Market Architecture
II.i. The Tariff Architecture and Its Contradictions
The trade regime of the mid-2020s marks a decisive departure from the price-centered logic of the Washington Consensus. It has been supplanted by a policy-driven architecture in which tariffs, subsidies, export controls, and investment screening mechanisms function as the primary instruments of economic statecraft.
By the end of 2025, U.S. tariff levels had reached their highest point since the Second World War. Analysis from the McKinsey Global Institute—particularly its March 2026 report Geopolitics and the Geometry of Global Trade—demonstrates that these measures displaced over $165 billion in trade from the U.S.–China corridor, fundamentally reshaping global trade flows along geopolitical axes. Yet contrary to prevailing expectations, this disruption did not precipitate systemic contraction. Global trade volumes continued to expand, outpacing overall economic growth, while both U.S. imports and Chinese exports reached record levels.
The outcome has been structural bifurcation rather than retrenchment. The United States substituted approximately two-thirds of reduced Chinese imports with alternative suppliers, while Chinese firms adapted through price reductions averaging 8 percent to penetrate new markets. The principal beneficiaries have been Southeast Asian economies, particularly within ASEAN, which have simultaneously deepened trade relationships with both major powers.
The European Union, by contrast, faces what the McKinsey analysis characterizes as a “double squeeze”: intensified competition from lower-cost Chinese imports within its domestic market, combined with diminished export competitiveness in the United States due to elevated tariff barriers.
Legal uncertainty further complicates this landscape. In February 2026, the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated key tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, prompting the administration to reconstruct its tariff regime under alternative statutory authorities. Shortly thereafter, on March 11, 2026, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative initiated Section 301 investigations targeting more than a dozen major economies—including China, the EU, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, and India—focused on alleged structural overcapacity in manufacturing sectors.
The resulting tariff architecture remains in flux: while the directional shift toward geoeconomic competition appears durable, the legal and institutional instruments underpinning it remain contested and unstable.
The EU–U.S. “Turnberry deal,” ratified by the European Parliament, illustrates the trade-offs inherent in this environment. By fixing EU exports at a 15 percent tariff rate, the agreement provides regulatory predictability but simultaneously entrenches a higher effective rate than the 8.5 percent observed in 2025. This diminishes EU competitiveness relative to actors benefiting from tariff rollbacks. According to ING Economic Research, tariffs alone are projected to reduce EU exports to the U.S. by approximately 4.6 percent in 2026.
Efforts to offset these losses through trade diversification are underway. A landmark EU–India agreement concluded in January 2026 reduces automotive tariffs from 110 percent to 10 percent over five years, while a parallel agreement with Mercosur expands access to Latin American markets. However, these alternatives do not yet replicate the scale or depth of the U.S. market, leaving the EU structurally exposed.
II.ii. The Geopolitics of Scarcity: Critical Minerals as Strategic Infrastructure
If tariffs constitute the short-term architecture of geoeconomic rivalry, critical minerals represent its long-term foundation. The 2025 G7 Kananaskis Summit, chaired by Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, formally elevated critical minerals to the center of collective economic security strategy through the launch of a Critical Minerals Action Plan and a Canada-led production alliance.
By October 2025, G7 energy and environment ministers had announced 26 investment initiatives totaling over $6.4 billion across projects involving graphite, rare earth elements, and scandium, spanning nine allied countries. These initiatives reflect recognition that supply chains for critical inputs—essential to energy transition technologies, advanced manufacturing, and defense systems—have become strategic assets rather than neutral market goods.
The underlying vulnerability is structural. China maintains dominant control over the processing of rare earth elements, particularly those required for permanent magnets, electric vehicle batteries, and advanced weapons systems. This dominance has already been operationalized as geopolitical leverage. Following tariff escalations in April 2025, Beijing restricted exports of several heavy rare earth elements and associated magnet technologies, demonstrating the coercive potential embedded within supply chain dependencies.
In response, G7 states are constructing what may be described as strategic supply chain architecture: diversifying production, securing long-term offtake agreements, and implementing price stabilization mechanisms designed to shield emerging suppliers from predatory pricing practices.
A pivotal development has been the integration of Australia into G7-aligned critical minerals frameworks. Firms such as Lynas Rare Earths illustrate the feasibility of non-Chinese processing capacity when supported by sustained policy coordination and capital investment. Simultaneously, Canada has moved to designate critical minerals as “essential” under amendments to its Defence Production Act, coupled with the establishment of a national strategic stockpiling program.
Transatlantic coordination is also advancing. The EU and United States are reportedly approaching agreement on a joint critical minerals framework incorporating minimum price guarantees and shared processing infrastructure. Such measures, if implemented effectively, would mark a significant step toward institutionalizing collective resource security.
Yet significant implementation gaps remain. A September 2025 G7 technical meeting in Chicago revealed persistent divergences among member states regarding the appropriate degree of economic decoupling from China. While some advocate stringent sourcing requirements, others prioritize the preservation of commercial ties. This divergence is reflected in private sector sentiment: the American Chamber of Commerce in China reported in its 2026 Business Climate Survey that 79 percent of member firms maintain a neutral or positive outlook on U.S.–China relations—a 30-percentage-point improvement from the previous year.
This tension—between strategic decoupling and pragmatic interdependence—captures the core paradox of the emerging geoeconomic order. States seek autonomy, yet remain structurally embedded in networks of mutual dependence that cannot be rapidly unwound without significant economic cost.
III. The Digital Sovereignty Dimension: Artificial Intelligence as Geopolitical Infrastructure
III.i. AI Governance as a Bayesian Signal
By 2026, artificial intelligence has decisively transcended its status as a discrete technological domain to become a form of geopolitical infrastructure. The regulatory choices, procurement strategies, and export control regimes that states adopt in relation to AI systems now function as strategic signals—observable actions through which states communicate their underlying preferences regarding cooperation, competition, and systemic rivalry. In this sense, AI governance has become embedded within the informational substrate of international politics, shaping the process of Bayesian belief updating among state actors operating under conditions of uncertainty.
The European Union has constructed the most internally coherent and institutionally dense model of AI governance. The Artificial Intelligence Act, which entered into force on August 1, 2024, with phased implementation beginning in February 2025, represents the first comprehensive attempt to regulate AI systems across their full lifecycle. Complemented by the Data Act, the NIS2 Directive, the Digital Operational Resilience Act, and the Data Governance Act, the EU has articulated a systemic legal theory of digital order grounded not in territorial data control alone, but in portability, auditability, cyber resilience, and continuous oversight.
This regulatory architecture is reinforced by industrial and technological initiatives designed to reduce dependence on external platforms. The OpenEuroLLM—a coordinated effort to develop large language models across all 24 official EU languages—alongside the “Apply AI Strategy,” which promotes preferential procurement of European-developed systems, signals a transition toward what Oxford Insights has characterized as technological sovereignty. Here, governance and industrial policy converge: regulation does not merely constrain markets but actively structures them.
The United States, by contrast, has adopted a more fragmented and strategically ambivalent posture. Its decision to boycott the November 2025 G20 Summit in South Africa—where the G20 Taskforce on Artificial Intelligence, Data Governance, and Innovation for Sustainable Development was established—signaled a retreat from multilateral standard-setting in this domain. At a September 2025 debate in the United Nations Security Council, Michael Kratsios explicitly rejected the premise of “centralised control and global governance” of AI, thereby distancing the United States not only from binding regulatory frameworks but also from softer voluntary coordination mechanisms.
As the Atlantic Council has observed, this relative absence from multilateral processes creates strategic space for China to advance an alternative normative framework. China’s Global AI Governance Action Plan emphasizes national sovereignty, infrastructure development, and capacity-building for the Global South, while advocating for the United Nations as the primary locus of rule-making—an institutional setting in which China’s influence is comparatively amplified relative to G7-centered arrangements.
The diffusion of the concept of digital sovereignty is itself indicative of systemic transformation. By 2026, more than ninety countries have adopted formal policy statements asserting sovereign control over digital infrastructure and data governance. What originated as a distinctly European regulatory philosophy has thus evolved into a near-universal organizing principle of state behavior in the digital domain.
III.ii. AI and the Fragmentation of Governance Architecture
The French-led 2026 G7 Presidency confronts a particularly acute governance dilemma: whether existing coordination frameworks can be sustained in the face of deepening transatlantic divergence and intensifying geopolitical competition. The Hiroshima AI Process, launched at the 2023 G7 Summit, established a set of guiding principles and a voluntary code of conduct for AI developers, with Japan playing a mediating role between U.S. market-oriented approaches and EU regulatory maximalism.
Subsequent institutional developments have attempted to consolidate this framework. The Center for AI and Digital Policy has recommended that G7 AI governance be explicitly anchored in fundamental rights, meaningful human control, and democratic accountability. In parallel, the G7 established an AI Network in 2025 to coordinate public sector expertise across member states. Yet these efforts face a structural constraint: coherence requires alignment among actors whose underlying strategic preferences are increasingly divergent.
The stakes of this fragmentation are not merely normative but materially strategic. AI compute infrastructure—encompassing semiconductor fabrication, hyperscale data centers, and cloud procurement ecosystems—has been reclassified by governments as critical infrastructure, analogous to ports, energy grids, and transportation networks. Export controls on advanced semiconductors thus function as a strategic throttle, determining which actors possess the computational capacity necessary to train frontier AI systems.
Within this context, the divergence between the EU’s regulatory model and the United States’ more permissive, innovation-centric framework is producing distinct governance ecosystems. These ecosystems are not merely different—they are increasingly incompatible in their underlying assumptions about risk, accountability, and the role of the state.
As post-World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2026 analyses have noted, the central question has shifted in a fundamental way. The debate is no longer centered on the functional capabilities of AI—what AI should do—but on the locus of authority: who determines what AI is permitted to do, under what conditions, and in whose interest. This shift marks the full politicization of artificial intelligence as a domain of geopolitical contestation.
IV. Geostrategy as a Bayesian Game: The 2026 Equilibrium
IV.i. The Formal Framework: Types, Signals, and Belief Updating
A Bayesian game-theoretic framework provides a particularly precise analytical lens through which to interpret the contemporary international system. In such a framework, actors operate under conditions of incomplete information regarding the “types” of other players—their underlying preferences, constraints, and strategic objectives. Decision-making is therefore contingent not on certainty, but on probabilistic beliefs that are continuously updated in response to observed signals.
Within the current international environment, three ideal-type state orientations can be analytically distinguished:
Type L — Status Quo Liberal. These states remain committed to multilateralism, rule-based trade, and the preservation of liberal norms, even where such commitments impose constraints on short-term national economic advantage. In 2026, France, Canada, and Japan approximate this type, though each has incorporated elements of strategic conditionality into its policy framework.
Type A — Strategic Autonomist. These actors deploy the language of liberalism while prioritizing domestic industrial resilience, control over strategic resources, and selective decoupling from systemic rivals. The evolving posture of the European Union—characterized by trade defense instruments, digital sovereignty initiatives, and “friendshoring” strategies—exemplifies this orientation. The United Kingdom and Germany exhibit similar tendencies.
Type R — Revisionist Illiberal. These states seek to reshape or displace the liberal international order through transactional bilateralism, coercive economic instruments, and alternative governance frameworks. China and Russia display persistent Type R characteristics, though China’s engagement with Global South–oriented AI governance introduces a degree of strategic ambiguity.
The central analytical challenge arises from the noise embedded in observed signals. In technical terms, current G7 behavior does not allow external observers to reliably distinguish between Type L and Type A actors. U.S. tariff policies—shaped by executive discretion and subject to judicial contestation—simultaneously resemble the protective measures of a Type A state and the disruptive tendencies associated with Type R behavior. Similarly, the EU’s deployment of trade defense mechanisms against both China and, indirectly, the United States generates ambiguity regarding whether it is defending liberal norms or recalibrating away from them.
This ambiguity produces what game theory defines as a Pooling Equilibrium: a condition in which actors of different underlying types adopt similar observable strategies, rendering differentiation impossible for external observers.
IV.ii. The Pooling Equilibrium and Its Consequences
The emergence of a Pooling Equilibrium in the contemporary system has destabilizing implications. When Type R actors—such as China in the Indo-Pacific or in its export control responses—cannot clearly distinguish between a declining Type L actor and an increasingly assertive Type A actor, the incentive structure shifts toward probing behavior. Strategic ambiguity invites experimentation: incremental escalations designed to test the boundaries of acceptable response.
Each such probe generates new information, triggering further rounds of Bayesian updating. However, in a high-noise environment, this updating process is prone to miscalculation rather than convergence. Signals may be misinterpreted, intentions misread, and thresholds misjudged.
The 2026 equilibrium is therefore inherently fragile. It no longer resembles a system of near-perfect information in which liberal dominance is structurally embedded. Instead, it constitutes an iterative game of belief revision, in which each domestic political development—most notably the 2026 U.S. midterm elections—reshapes the global distribution of expectations regarding conflict and cooperation.
As Staffan I. Lindberg has cautioned, further deterioration in U.S. electoral integrity indicators would significantly accelerate democratic decline, with cascading implications for the credibility of the G7 as a collective actor. The midterm elections thus function not merely as a domestic political event, but as a global signal of systemic significance.
A contested or procedurally compromised electoral process would likely be interpreted by Type R actors as evidence of drift away from liberal institutionalism, expanding the perceived opportunity space for revisionist action. Conversely, a process demonstrating institutional resilience—competitive elections, judicial independence, and orderly legislative transitions—would reinforce perceptions of Type A consolidation, stabilizing expectations and lowering the perceived risk of cooperative engagement.
IV.iii. The Role of Scarcity in Bayesian Updating
Resource scarcity introduces a critical amplification mechanism into this framework. As recognized in the G7 Critical Minerals Action Plan, such resources are not merely inputs to economic production but constitute the foundational “building blocks” of digital and energy-secure economies. Under conditions of scarcity, the cost of misclassification—incorrectly inferring an opponent’s type—rises sharply.
When the resource at stake is non-substitutable within relevant policy time horizons, errors in Bayesian updating carry disproportionately high strategic consequences. Treating a Type R actor as if it were a constrained Type A partner may result in exposure to coercion at precisely the moment when resilience is most needed.
China’s restriction of rare earth exports following U.S. tariff escalation in April 2025 constitutes a costly signal—an action that, in Bayesian terms, should shift posterior beliefs toward a Type R interpretation. Yet subsequent developments complicate this inference. The May 2025 U.S.–China trade truce—reducing U.S. tariffs to 30 percent and Chinese tariffs to 10 percent—combined with a substantial improvement in business sentiment reported by the American Chamber of Commerce in China, suggests that many private actors are updating toward a conditional Type A model of Chinese behavior: strategically assertive, but ultimately bounded by transactional incentives.
This divergence between state-level and market-level belief updating introduces an additional layer of complexity. The risk is not merely analytical error, but temporal misalignment: private actors may prematurely internalize a narrative of stabilization, while underlying structural dynamics continue to favor strategic competition. In such a context, short-term de-escalation may be misinterpreted as long-term accommodation—a misreading with potentially significant geopolitical consequences.
V. Strategic Projections: The Domain Landscape, 2026–2050
The following assessment projects the evolution of key strategic domains across three temporal horizons. Drawing on the Bayesian framework developed above, it distinguishes between baseline trajectories—those most consistent with current signal patterns—and critical uncertainties capable of shifting those trajectories under conditions of rapid belief updating.
Trade
2026 Reality.
Global trade is now governed by a policy-driven architecture in which tariffs, subsidies, and regulatory screening mechanisms displace price efficiency as the primary organizing principle. The United States’ tariff escalation has redirected more than $165 billion out of the U.S.–China trade corridor, while the European Union faces a structural “double squeeze” from intensified Chinese competition and reduced access to the U.S. market. Meanwhile, ASEAN economies have emerged as the principal beneficiaries of trade diversion, deepening commercial ties with both major powers.
2035 Trajectory.
Trade flows are likely to consolidate into geopolitically aligned blocs, though not in rigidly exclusionary forms. The deepening of agreements such as EU–India and EU–Mercosur will partially offset transatlantic frictions, while AI-enabled services and digital trade become increasingly dominant sectors. Supply chains will be “re-optimized” for political reliability rather than cost minimization, embedding strategic considerations into commercial decision-making.
2050 Bayesian Projection.
The most probable long-term configuration is a system of fragmented resource blocs, organized around control of critical inputs—lithium, rare earth elements, and AI compute infrastructure. These blocs will not be hermetically sealed; instead, they will interact through managed interface zones characterized by negotiated access, regulatory interoperability, and periodic coercive pressure.
Security
2026 Reality.
The security environment is defined by AI-enabled cyber operations, contested deterrence dynamics in the Indo-Pacific, and fiscal strain within NATO. The weaponization of critical mineral supply chains—particularly rare earth export controls—has introduced a new vector of coercive capability into statecraft.
2035 Trajectory.
European security architecture is likely to evolve toward partial autonomy from the United States, driven by both strategic necessity and political divergence. G7 critical minerals stockpiles and coordinated procurement mechanisms will become operational, while regional deterrence frameworks—particularly in the Indo-Pacific—will be formalized and institutionalized.
2050 Bayesian Projection.
Security arrangements will coalesce into regionalized “umbrellas,” reflecting partial strategic decoupling among major powers. However, these structures will be stabilized by mutual dependencies in critical resources and technological systems, creating a paradoxical equilibrium in which interdependence constrains escalation even as rivalry persists.
Governance
2026 Reality.
Digital sovereignty has become a near-universal organizing principle, with more than ninety states adopting formal policy frameworks. The Artificial Intelligence Act is operational within the EU, while the United States remains selectively disengaged from multilateral AI governance initiatives. The G7 AI Network represents an initial attempt at coordination, but lacks binding authority.
2035 Trajectory.
Two primary AI governance ecosystems are likely to emerge: a rights-based, regulatory model anchored in Europe and a more flexible, state-sovereignty-centered framework aligned with China and multilateral institutions. Limited interoperability will be maintained in specific sectors—particularly trade and safety standards—where coordination is functionally necessary.
2050 Bayesian Projection.
The long-term equilibrium is likely to consist of coexisting governance regimes: post-liberal technocratic systems alongside residual liberal-democratic frameworks. Governance will increasingly be exercised through standards, protocols, and technical architectures rather than universal norms, reflecting a shift from ideological convergence to functional coexistence.
Democratic Resilience
2026 Reality.
The United States now registers the lowest Liberal Democracy Index score among G7 members, while democratic backsliding is observable in states such as Italy and the United Kingdom. Institutional responses—including the EU’s Democracy Shield and the Council of Europe’s New Democratic Pact—are operational but remain in early stages.
2035 Trajectory.
Democratic recovery trajectories will be contingent on near-term political inflection points, most notably the 2026 U.S. midterm elections. Cases such as Poland and Brazil may serve as partial models of resilience, demonstrating the possibility—but not the inevitability—of institutional recovery following periods of democratic erosion.
2050 Bayesian Projection.
Liberal democracies are likely to constitute a durable minority within the global system. Their strength will derive less from universalist claims and more from demonstrable institutional quality—rule of law, administrative capacity, and societal resilience—functioning as high-performance enclaves within a pluralistic and ideologically heterogeneous international order.
VI. Recommendations for the 2026 G7 Presidency Under France
VI.i. Establish Credible Proof of Type
The immediate strategic priority for the G7 under France’s 2026 Presidency is to reduce the signal ambiguity that sustains the current Pooling Equilibrium. This requires the construction of proof-of-type mechanisms: institutional commitments that credibly distinguish G7 members as Type A Strategic Autonomists—capable of defending their interests within a competitive system—without collapsing into Type R revisionism.
In practical terms, this entails moving beyond voluntary coordination toward rule-governed commitments. Transatlantic agreements on AI governance should extend beyond the Hiroshima AI Process to include binding provisions on transparency, human oversight, and democratic accountability. Similarly, the G7’s critical minerals framework should be institutionalized as a standing body with defined governance structures, dispute resolution mechanisms, and coordinated response capabilities to counter market manipulation—particularly in response to precedents such as China’s 2025 rare earth export restrictions.
VI.ii. Pursue Transactional Unity Without Demanding Ideological Purity
The strategic posture of the United States has shifted toward transactional bilateralism, reflecting deeper structural forces—economic nationalism, populist electoral dynamics, and executive-centered governance—that are unlikely to dissipate in the near term. Attempting to condition G7 cooperation on a full U.S. return to value-based multilateralism is therefore both analytically flawed and strategically counterproductive.
A more effective approach is to anchor unity in shared material interests rather than convergent ideological narratives. Areas such as critical mineral supply chain security, AI export controls, Indo-Pacific deterrence, and resistance to resource coercion provide a robust foundation for cooperation irrespective of differing normative frameworks.
The G7 should therefore prioritize shared diagnostic frameworks—common assessments of structural challenges such as Chinese industrial overcapacity, rare earth monopsony dynamics, and AI governance fragmentation—while accepting pluralism in the language through which these challenges are articulated.
VI.iii. Prioritize Resilience over Efficiency
The liberal international order was constructed on principles of efficiency: comparative advantage, specialization, and the minimization of transaction costs. The emerging post-liberal order, by contrast, must prioritize resilience—the capacity to absorb shocks, sustain critical systems under adversarial conditions, and maintain institutional integrity amid systemic pressure.
This shift does not represent a rejection of economic rationality, but rather its adaptation to a more hostile informational and strategic environment. Under conditions of uncertainty and strategic competition, redundancy, diversification, and controlled inefficiency become rational investments.
Operationalizing this shift requires institutional integration across policy domains. Geostrategy can no longer be confined to foreign and defense ministries; it must be embedded within economic governance. Coordination among finance, industry, and digital ministries—already partially institutionalized through G7 ministerial processes such as the 2025 Industry, Digital and Technology Ministerial Declaration and the Energy and Environment Ministers’ framework—should be formalized into a standing geoeconomic coordination mechanism under the 2026 French Presidency.
VI.iv. Invest in Democratic Resilience as a Strategic Asset
The Bayesian logic underpinning this analysis implies that domestic political conditions within G7 states directly shape external perceptions of their strategic type. Democratic backsliding is therefore not merely a normative concern—it is a material constraint on geopolitical credibility.
When the United States—the historical anchor of the liberal order—registers the lowest Liberal Democracy Index score within the G7, and when that decline is characterized as unprecedented by leading measurement institutions, the collective credibility of the G7 as a liberal alternative is substantively weakened.
Accordingly, investments in democratic resilience should be treated as strategic assets on par with defense expenditures. Initiatives such as the EU’s Democracy Shield and the Council of Europe’s New Democratic Pact provide institutional templates that can be adapted and scaled.
The 2026 G7 Summit under French leadership offers a critical opportunity to formalize this linkage: to articulate, at the highest political level, that democratic governance—free expression, judicial independence, media pluralism, and electoral integrity—is not simply a matter of values, but a foundational requirement for sustaining a resilient, strategically autonomous liberal enclave within an increasingly fragmented global order.
VII. Conclusion: Managing the Perfect Bayesian Equilibrium of Conflict
The concept of a Perfect Bayesian Equilibrium describes a condition in which each actor’s strategy is optimal given its beliefs, and those beliefs are themselves consistent with the observed strategies of others. Transposed into the domain of international relations, the most dangerous instantiation of such an equilibrium is one in which all major actors have updated toward a shared expectation: that cooperation is systematically risk-dominated by containment, and that the probability of exploitation by opaque or adversarial “types” outweighs the potential gains from multilateral engagement.
The evidence emerging from the 2024–2026 period suggests that the international system is approaching—though has not yet fully reached—such a threshold. There remain countervailing indicators that prevent a definitive shift into a conflict-dominant equilibrium. Global trade has demonstrated unexpected resilience, continuing to expand even as geopolitical frictions intensify. The May 2025 U.S.–China tariff truce indicates that both sides retain a conditional preference for managed competition over systemic rupture. Moreover, coordination among G7 states on critical minerals and artificial intelligence governance—however incomplete and signal-distorted—has yielded tangible institutional progress. These developments constitute credible, if fragile, grounds for cautious optimism.
Yet the structural vectors shaping the system point in a more troubling direction. Democratic backsliding within the G7 core—most consequentially the unprecedented deterioration of democratic indicators in the United States—is eroding the credibility of the liberal model as a viable alternative to illiberal governance. The persistence of a Pooling Equilibrium, generated by noisy and often contradictory G7 signals, is increasing the propensity of Type R actors to engage in probing and escalation, particularly in strategically sensitive theaters such as the Indo-Pacific and Eastern Europe.
At the same time, structural dependencies remain unresolved. Critical mineral supply chains continue to exhibit high levels of concentration, with China retaining disproportionate control over processing capacity. In the digital domain, AI governance is fragmenting into rival institutional architectures whose divergence may become path-dependent once technical standards, regulatory regimes, and industrial ecosystems are fully entrenched.
The strategic task facing the 2026 G7 Summit under France’s leadership is therefore neither restorative nor revolutionary. It is not to revive a universal liberal order whose structural conditions have materially eroded, nor to embrace an unbounded model of Strategic Autonomy that sacrifices the normative commitments distinguishing the G7 from its competitors. Rather, it is to manage a transition: toward a resilient, institutionally coherent, and strategically credible liberal enclave.
Such an enclave will, by necessity, be more limited in geographic scope than the post–Cold War Liberal International Order. Yet it can also be more durable—anchored in demonstrable institutional quality, candid in its recognition of the transactional dimensions of external engagement, and disciplined in its defense of democratic governance as the foundation of its legitimacy and influence.
The post-liberal era does not inexorably entail a descent into a Perfect Bayesian Equilibrium of conflict. But avoiding that outcome requires a degree of strategic clarity, institutional commitment, and internal coherence that the G7 has thus far only partially achieved. Clearer signals must replace ambiguity; binding commitments must supplement voluntary coordination; and, perhaps most critically, member states must confront the extent to which their domestic political trajectories shape their external credibility.
In a system defined by uncertainty and continuous belief updating, perception is not merely a reflection of reality—it is a constitutive element of it. The management of that perception, through credible action and institutional integrity, will determine whether the emerging international order stabilizes into competitive coexistence or hardens into durable confrontation.