2025 年终中外大事记
2025 年走到年终,国际局势的主旋律仍是「不确定」:战火延宕、贸易摩
在地缘政治与安全上,俄乌战争持续牵动欧洲安全与军援结构;中东
在经济与贸易上,关税与產业政策回归成為大国竞争工具。金融时报
同时,IMF 的《世界经济展望》(2025 年 10 月)指出全球成长预期放缓:2024 年约 3.3%,2025 年约 3.2%,2026 年约 3.
在科技方面,生成式 AI 继续「从工具变成国力叙事」:算力、晶片、资料、监管与安全,逐
在气候与灾害方面,极端高温、风暴、洪水与野火造成更高的经济损
2025 Year-End Review: Major Events at Home and Abroad
As 2025 closed, the world did not return to a calmer “post-crisis” rhythm. Instead, it moved into a more fragmented and risk-heavy phase—marked by prolonged conflict, renewed trade frictions, accelerating AI competition, and more frequent climate extremes. The defining feature of the year was uncertainty: governments, markets, and societies repeatedly adjusted to shocks that arrived from multiple directions.
On the geopolitical and security front, the war in Ukraine continued to shape Europe’s security posture and defense spending, while the Middle East remained trapped in cycles of escalation, temporary pauses, and renewed tension. Beyond the headline conflicts, several regional flashpoints also reminded the world how quickly localized disputes can intensify—raising risks for energy supply, shipping routes, and global supply chains.
In trade and the global economy, tariffs and industrial policy became more central tools of great-power competition. As countries prioritized strategic industries and “economic security,” global trade felt less rule-based and more bloc-driven. Major institutions warned that global growth was likely to cool slightly compared with the previous year, reflecting higher friction costs, persistent inflation concerns in some regions, and uneven recovery across economies.
In technology, generative AI further shifted from a corporate race to a national priority. Computing power, advanced chips, data governance, and regulation increasingly became part of strategic planning. The promise of productivity gains grew, but so did debates over job displacement, energy demand, misinformation, and AI safety—turning innovation into both an opportunity and a governance challenge.
Finally, climate and disasters were impossible to ignore. Extreme heat, storms, floods, and wildfires carried heavy human and economic costs, pushing many governments to treat adaptation—resilient infrastructure, disaster preparedness, and insurance reform—not as a secondary agenda, but as a necessity alongside emissions reduction.
In sum, 2025’s key words were resilience and division. The global system held together, but under visible strain—and the real question for 2026 is not only who will compete harder, but who can build more reliable rules and safeguards so people can feel stability amid turbulence.