8. Erosion of global institutions: Rules under strain
Weakening trade and finance architecture raises systemic risk for exporters.
Risk
The post-Second World War trade and finance architecture is weakening. The World Trade Organization (WTO)’s dispute settlement paralysis, stalled reform efforts and legitimacy challenges at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank signal a shift toward ad hoc rules and power politics. Alternative lenders—such as China-led institutions—are gaining influence, while the role of the Paris Club, a group of major creditor nations that co-ordinates debt restructuring for distressed sovereigns, is diminishing.
Impact
For Canada, marginalization of these institutions would mean higher trade uncertainty and systemic risk. Without the WTO’s enforcement mechanisms, Canadian exporters face arbitrary tariffs and non-tariff barriers. The absence of co-ordinated crisis lending and debt restructuring—historically managed by the IMF, World Bank and Paris Club—would amplify financial contagion in emerging markets, reducing demand for Canadian goods and services. In a fragmented system dominated by competing blocs, Canadian businesses must navigate divergent rules and heightened geopolitical risk.