THE current international order faces unprecedented challenges that transcend national boundaries: climate change, technological disruption, economic inequality and emerging security threats.

As the world’s two largest economies and most influential powers – the US and China – find themselves at a crossroads, rather than continuing down a path of strategic competition that risks global instability, how about a bold alternative?

A Sino-American global condominium: a structured partnership for managing global affairs in the 21st century.

The economic relationship between the US and China has evolved far beyond simple trade. Their supply chains are interwoven, their financial systems interconnected, and their technological innovations increasingly complementary.

A condominium would formalise this interdependence into a framework for coordinated economic governance, potentially stabilising global markets and ensuring more equitable development outcomes worldwide.

Moreover, many of today’s most pressing challenges – from climate change to pandemic preparedness – require unprecedented levels of international cooperation. Neither the US nor China can address these issues unilaterally. A condominium structure would create institutional mechanisms for joint leadership on global initiatives, pooling resources and expertise while maintaining competitive dynamics in appropriate spheres.

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The current US-China relationship oscillates between cooperation and confrontation, creating uncertainty that undermines global stability. A condominium would establish clear rules of engagement, spheres of influence and mechanisms for dispute resolution, providing the predictability that global markets, allies and institutions desperately need.

Critics rightly point to fundamental differences in governance models and values between the US and China. However, the condominium model does not require ideological convergence; it requires pragmatic cooperation on shared interests while allowing for competition in other areas. The Cold War demonstrated that even adversaries can cooperate on existential threats when necessary.

Since both powers have extensive alliance networks that might view a condominium with suspicion, the framework would need to be inclusive, providing meaningful roles for allies and partners while reassuring them that their interests remain protected. This might involve creating tiered participation structures within the condominium framework.

A Sino-American global condominium represents both an ambitious vision and a pragmatic necessity. The alternative – continued strategic competition in an increasingly interconnected world – carries unacceptable risks of conflict and policy paralysis on global challenges that affect all humanity.

Success would require unprecedented levels of trust, institutional innovation and political courage from leaders in both nations. It would also require careful attention to the concerns of allies, partners and smaller nations, to ensure that great power cooperation does not become great power collusion at others’ expense.

While the obstacles are formidable, the potential rewards – global stability, enhanced capacity to address transnational challenges, and a more predictable international order – justify serious consideration of this framework.

The question is not whether the US and China can afford to cooperate more closely, but whether they can afford not to.

The 21st century’s greatest challenges require 21st-century solutions. A Sino-American condominium, properly structured and implemented, could provide the foundation for addressing these challenges while maintaining the competitive dynamics that drive innovation and progress. The time for considering such bold approaches is now, before the costs of continued strategic competition become prohibitive for all.

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