The Group of Twenty (G20)

US, China launch talks to overcome differences in trade
Finance

US, China launch talks to overcome differences in trade

  • 07 January, 2019
  • 06:16
Erdoğan communicates request to Putin on release of Ukrainian sailors
Region

Erdoğan communicates request to Putin on release of Ukrainian sailors

  • 07 December, 2018
  • 13:25
Putin may meet Trump in summer of 2019
Region

Putin may meet Trump in summer of 2019

  • 03 December, 2018
  • 05:15
Macron was not officially met upon arrival at G20 Summit at Buenos Aires Airport
Other countries

Macron was not officially met upon arrival at G20 Summit at Buenos Aires Airport

  • 30 November, 2018
  • 11:23
US and China appoint date for trade negotiations
Finance

US and China appoint date for trade negotiations

  • 30 November, 2018
  • 06:36
G20 summit to kick off in Argentina
Other countries

G20 summit to kick off in Argentina

  • 30 November, 2018
  • 05:21
Protests against G20 held in Argentina
Other countries

Protests against G20 held in Argentina

  • 29 November, 2018
  • 10:32
Washington confirms Putin and Trump meeting at G20 Summit
Other countries

Washington confirms Putin and Trump meeting at G20 Summit

  • 29 November, 2018
  • 10:05
Media: Meeting between Putin and Trump on G20 will last for two hours
Other countries

Media: Meeting between Putin and Trump on G20 will last for two hours

  • 29 November, 2018
  • 07:05
Crown prince of Saudi Arabia visiting Argentina
Other countries

Crown prince of Saudi Arabia visiting Argentina

  • 28 November, 2018
  • 13:40
Kremlin comments on Trump's statement about possible cancellation of meeting with Putin
Region

Kremlin comments on Trump's statement about possible cancellation of meeting with Putin

  • 28 November, 2018
  • 10:09
Trump threatens to cancel G20 Putin talks over Ukraine-Russia maritime row
Other countries

Trump threatens to cancel G20 Putin talks over Ukraine-Russia maritime row

  • 28 November, 2018
  • 04:39
Merkel: G20 successfully tackling global economic issues
Finance

Merkel: G20 successfully tackling global economic issues

  • 24 November, 2018
  • 13:35
Date of signing new trade agreement between Mexico, Canada and US unveiled
Finance

Date of signing new trade agreement between Mexico, Canada and US unveiled

  • 09 November, 2018
  • 06:16
Lavrov: Putin and Trump will meet in Argentina
Other countries

Lavrov: Putin and Trump will meet in Argentina

  • 08 November, 2018
  • 10:00
Media: Macron disrupts meeting of Russian and US presidents in Paris
Other countries

Media: Macron disrupts meeting of Russian and US presidents in Paris

  • 06 November, 2018
  • 07:09
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The Group of Twenty (G20), which traditionally unites the world's largest developed and developing economies (accounting for approximately 80% of global GDP and 75% of international trade), is experiencing its deepest institutional crisis since its founding by the spring of 2026.

Initially created as an effective mechanism for jointly overcoming global financial crises (as seen in 2008), the G20 format is paralyzed today. Against the backdrop of a large-scale regional war in the Middle East, blocked trade routes, and an aggressive sanctions policy, the "Group of Twenty" has de facto split into two irreconcilable camps.

Internal Fracture: G7 vs. BRICS+

In 2026, G20 summits and ministerial meetings are no longer a platform for developing unified economic strategies. Instead, they have turned into an arena for fierce political confrontation between the "Group of Seven" (G7) countries and the expanded BRICS bloc, acting on behalf of the Global South.

The Fault Line in the G20 Position of the "Collective West" (US, EU, Japan, etc.) Position of BRICS+ and the Global South (China, India, Brazil, etc.) Geopolitics and Conflicts Demanding strict condemnation of Iran and Russia in final communiqués. Promoting the isolation of rogue states. Categorical refusal to politicize the G20's economic platform. Accusing the West of double standards (particularly regarding the situations in Gaza and Lebanon). Financial System Maintaining the dominance of the US dollar and control over institutions (IMF, World Bank); using SWIFT as an instrument of pressure. Actively promoting de-dollarization, creating alternative payment systems, and record-breaking purchases of physical gold by Central Banks. Energy and Climate Accelerated energy transition; implementation of cross-border carbon taxes (CBAM) that severely impact developing nations. Demanding fair financing for the energy transition; defending the right to use fossil fuels to ensure economic growth.

The Economic Agenda in the Shadow of Global War

The spring 2026 sessions of G20 finance ministers and central bank governors are concluding without the signing of joint declarations. The global agenda is blocked by three unresolved macroeconomic shocks:

Logistical Collapse: The war in the Middle East and the actions of the Houthis in the Red Sea have severed traditional supply chains, triggering a new wave of global inflation.

Trade Fragmentation: The rise of protectionism, prohibitive tariffs between the US and China, as well as the policy of "friendshoring" (relocating production only to allied countries), are destroying the WTO's free trade principles that the G20 was meant to protect.

Debt Crisis: Record-high interest rates set by the US Federal Reserve have made foreign debt servicing unsustainable for dozens of the poorest countries. However, debt restructuring mechanisms within the G20 have stalled due to disagreements between Western creditors and China.

Significance for Azerbaijan: The Triumph of Bilateral Diplomacy

Although Azerbaijan is not a member of the G20, the paralysis of this mega-institution has direct strategic consequences for Baku. Report.az experts emphasize that the crisis of global multilateral governance paradoxically strengthens the positions of Middle Powers.

Alternative Logistics: The G20's inability to ensure the security of maritime trade through the Suez Canal has turned the Middle Corridor (TITR) passing through Azerbaijan into an indispensable overland artery between Asia and Europe.

Energy Pragmatism: Amidst climate disputes within the "Group of Twenty," Azerbaijan (having successfully hosted COP29 in 2024) continues to act as a reliable and predictable supplier of energy resources, concluding direct bilateral contracts with European and Asian partners, bypassing dysfunctional global mechanisms.

Balancing Act: Baku successfully leverages the contradictions within the G20, maintaining strategic partnerships both with Western countries (energy, technology) and with the leaders of BRICS and the Non-Aligned Movement (trade, transit).

Conclusion

In the realities of 2026, the G20 format can no longer fulfill the function of a "global economic government." The world has transitioned into an era of transactional diplomacy, where regional alliances, bilateral agreements, and control over physical logistics mean far more than the vague declarations of paralyzed international forums.