future course: Whether Trump will meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Un for a second time remains to be seen, according to The Japan Times. How Brexit will turn out and how populist sentiments across Europe will play out in the European Union's parliamentary election in May will set the future course of the EU. Tensions between Japan and South Korea and efforts to solve the decades-old territorial issues between Japan and Russia are holding the attention of foreign policy experts. ; In many ways, major policy issues that were left unsolved in 2018 may have to be carried by world leaders to 2019. The U.S.-China trade war started by U.S. President Donald Trump seems to be accelerating with no signs of abating. Some experts say the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, that begins Jan. 22, will be the first good opportunity for those issues to be discussed among the world's top political and business leaders. As the two largest economies in the world, U.S.-China relations will always warrant close attention in trade, but also technology and climate change policies. It is always hard to predict what bilateral or multilateral issue will capture the most attention in Davos mainly because we live in such volatile and uncertain times, said Lee Howell, a member of the WEF's Managing Board.
(news.financializer.com). As
reported in the news.
Tagged under future course, japan russia topics.