European leaders will gather this week to forge a new economic direction as the area grapples with rising doubts about government credibility and efforts to compete with global digital behemoths.
In an interview published Tuesday with various journalists, French President Emmanuel Macron raised warnings about Washingtonβs posture toward the European Union.Β Macron characterized the currentΒ global trade environment, saying, βThere are threats and intimidation, and then suddenly Washington backs down. And we think itβs over.Β But donβt believe it for a second.β
Macro warned that βevery dayβ there are US threats against Europe, noting further hostile moves to come in the form of American import tariffs. Tensions over digital regulation have prompted Paris to demand sweeping economic reforms across the bloc.
Macron pushes for protective measures
Macron told audiences at Davos the EU requires an economic transformation, stating, βwe do prefer respect to bullies. We do prefer science to plotism, and we do prefer rule of law to brutality.β He stressed that economic concerns must become the priority. His plan revolves around what he calls a βEuropean preferenceβ strategy.
The bloc faces a double challenge, the French leader said in the February interview, explaining, βWe have the Chinese tsunami on the trade front, and we have minute-by-minute instability on the American side. These two crises amount to a profound shock, a rupture for Europeans.β He advocates for what he calls βprotection, which is not protectionism, but rather European preferenceβ to safeguard manufacturers.
These policy demands come as private investment accelerates dramatically. The pursuit of what officials call βstrategic autonomyβ appears in current funding trends. Investors have directed substantial capital toward European artificial intelligence firms and defense technology ventures, viewing them as essential for security interests.
European tech investment reached β¬72 billion in 2025, according to Tech.eu, marking the second-strongest year of the past three. Artificial intelligence led the surge, with Franceβs Mistral AI securing a β¬1.7 billion round that nearly doubled its valuation to β¬11.7 billion.
Corruption concerns undermine progress
Institutional weaknesses stand in the way. The industrial push confronts a major barrier: eroding public confidence in governmental bodies. Transparency Internationalβs 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index reveals that βpersistent failures of leadershipβ are accelerating the loss of public confidence in government.
Europe remains the least corrupt region globally, though the regionβs average score fell from 66 to 64, with only seven countries showing any improvement.
The assessment documents a βsignificant declineβ across thirteen nations. Hungary and Bulgaria remain at the bottom of the EU with scores of 40. Transparency International noted that newly proposed powers to shut down critical NGOs face accusations of weakening judicial independence.
Even nations with stronger track records experienced rating decreases. Flora Cresswell, TIβs regional adviser, argued that under present circumstances, βEurope should be raising, not lowering, its anti-corruption ambitions.β
The EU is under pressure from two sides. It must establish a βmaturing ecosystemβ in sophisticated technology businesses, with military, security, and resilience firms generating a record $8.7 billion by 2025, while also addressing weakening democratic standards.
As citizens become more dubious of government accountability, concerns about Europeβs capacity to achieve βtechnological and security independenceβ persist. Macronβs position remains unchanged: without restoring βfair trade termsβ and resolving internal governance difficulties, Europe risks being βswept away.β
Why economic power alone cannot secure the unionβs future?
The conditions highlight a mismatch between Europeβs technological objectives and its deteriorating governmental institutions. Capital pours into the defense and AI sectors, but uneven fiscal coordination makes these businesses exposed to the same global trade barriers that they seek to overcome.
Declining governance standards also create openings for foreign interference. Economic growth and democratic integrity travel in opposite directions. If French requests for involvement collide with German-led deregulation ambitions, the EU may stay split rather than cohesive.
This fragmentation facilitates the same collapse Macron warns about, since individual states may bypass Brussels to form alternative alliances.
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