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Expert report

Instruments of a strategic foreign economic policy

Authors

  • Kamin
  • K.
  • Bernoth
  • K.
  • Dombrowski
  • J.
  • Felbermayr
  • G.
  • Fratzscher
  • M.
  • Hoffmann
  • M.
  • Horn
  • S.
  • Neuhoff
  • K.
  • Poitiers
  • N.F.
  • Rieth
  • M.
  • Sandkamp
  • A.
  • Weil
  • P.
  • Wolff
  • G.
  • Zachmann
  • G.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

F4 F5 L5 Q58

Key Words

Foreign Trade

geoeconomics

Related Topics

Monetary Policy

International Trade

European Union & Euro

Climate

Germany

The separation of security and economic objectives in foreign policy, which was often sought in international political issues in the past, has outlived its usefulness. The transition to a more power-based order can be felt around the world. International economic instruments and agreements are increasingly used to achieve various foreign policy goals. These are simultaneously used to promote own political interests, sometimes to the detriment of partner countries. This "weaponized interdependence" makes it necessary for Germany and the European Union to assess their vulnerabilities and to design their own defensive and offensive strategies.

The Kiel Institute for the World Economy, together with DIW Berlin and Bruegel, has produced a study on behalf of the Federal Foreign Office that addresses the objectives, instruments, and trade-offs of a strategic foreign economic policy and describes how to deal with them in the context of German and European policy making.

Kiel Institute Experts

  • Prof. Dr. Gabriel Felbermayr
    Kiel Institute Fellow
  • Prof. Dr. Sebastian Horn
    Research Director
  • Dr. Katrin Kamin
    Kiel Institute Fellow
  • Prof. Dr. Alexander Sandkamp
    Kiel Institute Researcher

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