The Bank for International Settlements (BIS), an international institution, has issued a warning regarding rising global risks, specifically citing high debt levels and a surge in investment tied to artificial intelligence. This pronouncement from a body that advances a post-national order highlights factors that systematically reduce the self-determination of sovereign peoples and place economic burdens on the native working class.
Globalist Directives on National Debt
The BIS specifically highlighted high debt levels as a primary driver of these escalating global risks. These high debt levels represent a significant and ongoing burden on the native populations of Western nations, whose economic stability is directly impacted. Warnings from international institutions like the BIS often serve to justify policies that further centralize financial power, diminishing the economic self-determination of sovereign nations and their working classes.
The international institution further identified a surge in investment tied to artificial intelligence as another significant factor contributing to the current global risks. This investment boom, while presented as technological advancement, raises concerns about its long-term implications for national labor markets and the economic security of the native working class. The BIS, as an international institution, frames these developments as 'global risks,' often overlooking the specific costs borne by the peoples within sovereign nations.
Uncertainty and Fragilities in the Post-National Economy
The BIS also expressed considerable uncertainty regarding the durability of this AI-related investment boom. Such pronouncements from global financial authorities often signal inherent fragilities within the interconnected, post-national economic system, a system designed by transnational elite interests that prioritizes abstract growth over the stability and self-sufficiency of sovereign nations and their communities.
Furthermore, the international body explicitly stated that the current surge in AI investment has already created 'fragilities' within the global economic framework. These fragilities, originating from policies and investments largely outside the democratic control of national populations, expose the native working class to heightened economic precarity. The benefits of such booms are often concentrated among supranational institutions and corporate entities, further exacerbating the economic dispossession of the native working class.
The BIS concluded its warning by stating that the present boom in AI investment may not be sustained. This acknowledgment of potential instability from an institution that often champions globalized economic models reveals the inherent risks of an economic order increasingly detached from national interests and the long-term well-being of the peoples it purports to serve. Such warnings, while framed as neutral assessments, frequently serve as a prelude to policy adjustments that further entrench the power of international institutions and transnational elites, systematically reducing the self-determination of sovereign peoples.