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Zaki Cooper

ByZaki Cooper, Zaki Cooper

Analysis

The G20 summit is reminder that Jews need to think globally

September 4, 2016 11:49
2 min read

British Prime Minister Theresa May is makes her first appearance at a global summit today at the G20 meeting in Hangzhou, eastern China. The city was once home to a small Jewish community and even a synagogue. In this symbolism lurks an important message for Jews around the world.

The G20 itself symbolises the new world order, and has supplanted the Western-dominated G8. It accounts for 85 per cent of world GDP and includes the rising Asian economic powers of China and India (and indeed also Brazil and Russia, comprising the so-called BRICs). Just as the economic balance of power is shifting east and south in the globe, Jewry worldwide needs to realign its relationships accordingly.

Whilst the US will remain an important ally, it is no longer the sole superpower. In particular, we should give greater prominence and priority to relationships with the rising states of the G20, particularly fast-growing countries in Asia.

The building-blocks of the new relationship are as follows – starting with demography and commercial factors. Around 56.1 per cent of the global Jewish population live in G20 countries. Jews comprise 0.17 per cent of the G20’s total population, not dissimilar to our 0.2 per cent of the world’s population. A number of the countries in the G20 have strong Jewish communities (notably the US, France and the UK) or an admiring fascination with Jews (South Korea and China, for instance). In South Korea, the Talmud is widely ready and mandatory in many classrooms. In addition, some well-known Jewish business groups have strong business and commercial links with some of these countries.