Do you remember how globalisation was really a thing back then? For an example, let's look at the case of GAP, which originates from the U.S. but produces their clothing in Bangladesh, using the country's labourers. Although that may not be a very decent example as it marks the atrocious side of globalisation, it still indicates that globalisation is there for us to notice. The world has never been this borderless, but it is true that now we should consider the possibility of using the word was to globalisation, since there are signs to the end of our globalised world. But, is it true though? And what's in for us then?
The Fault(s) in GlobalisationÂ
During the 2017 World Economic Forum in Davos, many finance ministers from participating countries enunciated that globalisation hasn't reached its own end. Globalisation, a process that has taken us this far in connecting people and businesses all over the world, is going to be maintained as they said and some proven its benefits to every progress in our lives. In support of that, the leader of China, Xi Jinping, expressed his admiration towards globalisation and emphasized his commitment in an open global economy. However, what might seem to be a growing commitment towards globalisation will soon turn into "deglobalisation" as some (powerful) countries use its benefit for their own dominance. In the case of this paradoxical event, China has been a great example since they are most likely to be the partisan of 'globalisation' to realize its main agenda on how to go global without really opening up.Â
We also need to realise that the product of globalisation kills itself and drives this world to another concept of inter-states' relationship. That perceivable product is inequality. Although inequalities between nations, for example between Eastern and Western countries, have narrowed in recent decades, evidence suggests that inequality within nations is rising. This can be seen from the fact that in everyday lives, we can see stark differences in wealth and living conditions within nations in this world. The distribution of income in South Africa for example, according to Palma ratio, shows that it has the world's highest gap between the richest 10% and the poorest 40% of the population's share, scoring 7.0 during 2010-2017 (Human Development Reports, UNDP). Another thing worth noticing is that even between adjoining neighbourhoods, which are Nogales in Arizona and Sonora, have perplexing unequal economic development, despite the fact that they have the same people, culture, and geography (Acemoglu and Robinson, 2012).
Furthermore, globalisation still has another missing part to begin with since the central body to shape itself is still absent (O'Sullivan, 2019). Aside from World Economic Forum, which we don't know yet if it can fulfill the function to shape globalisation, this world can't provide the governing body to supervise those rapid changes.Â
Entering Multipolarity
It may still be hard for some of us, even with those explanations, to digest the possibility of globalisation's departure as people don't want to relive the moments when their activities are  walled-off internally. Worry not, it seems like they have the right to be comforted that it won't happen -- at least in the near future. It is because the symptoms that are apparent in today's world don't really indicate the growing country-inwardness to replace globalisation; instead, the signs are directing more toward what it's called as multipolarity. Multipolarity can be described as a condition in which the world has several centres of power that lead to a diffused distribution of supremacy. In this matter, understanding multipolarity is crucial because it will produce one basic behaviour pattern amongst nations, which is the arithmetic of coalitions in both small and big matter.
Multipolarity will be a significant event for nations that have consequential power to build their own legacy, whether geographical or economical, to support their expansion. That's why as mentioned before, the urge to form coalitions will be more visible than ever. But only until the start of 2018, multipolarity has grown into something not merely theoretical, but rather observable, through some courses of events. Those events are trade tensions, technologies' advancement, and others that have separated this world into several distinct coalitions. According to Michael O'Sullivan in his book titled "The Levelling: What's Next After Globalization", a fully multipolar world is manifestly underway via distinct working's characteristics in three large regions: the U.S., China, and European Union (EU). Moreover, the concept of multipolarity, in this case, will be different from the concept of multilateralism because in multilateralism, although you have a different method, you can still work things together. While in multipolarity, regions will do things completely distinct and different.Â
The signs of multipolarity are developed from time to time, rather than crashing through the course of time all of a sudden. Before the growing existence of multipolarity, this world has experienced other structures, such as bipolarity by the Soviet Union and the U.S. during the Cold War as well as unipolarity by the U.S as a result from their victory in the Cold War. As the concept of multipolarity is pretty fluid, we can see the development in today's world from unipolarity to multipolarity through the rising power of China and the EU to be on par with the U.S.Â
Economic Multipolarity
The types of powers to acknowledge multipolarity's development can be seen in several factors, such as economic, financial, and geopolitical power. The economic factor is one unique determinant in the age of multipolarity as the use of this factor is very visible in today's world, making it easier for us to spot this occurrence. As aforementioned, countries will be pivoted around either of the three major poles, namely: the U.S., China, and the EU. First, we can see that China is currently a hot topic to become the rising power, levelling the U.S., and triggered it to start creating tensions in trade sector. This has already signalled one of the general patterns of great power behaviour, in which the U.S.believes that the safe way to improve their relative position is by pursuing policies to weaken others (China). China itself has proven its worth in becoming a consequential power and soon enough will form its own alliances with other nations. This is validated by IMF Data which stated that in comparison with 2011, during 2018 countries in Asia (Myanmar, Malaysia, Vietnam, Bangladesh) traded more with China rather than the U.S. This also applies with Australia in which from 2012-2017, their total FDI from China increased 21 percent per year, compared with 6 percent from the U.S. Additionally, China has also spread its wings to the Middle East region under its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) through the signing of the Declaration of Action on China-Arab States Cooperation. This declaration marks growing and deeper relationship between China and the Arab States. With these, China can be considered as capable in persuading other countries to be a part of its orbit.