Website icon Xpert.Digital

The world in November 2025: hangover, consumer frenzy, and the harsh reality.

The world in November 2025: hangover, consumer frenzy, and the harsh reality.

The world in November 2025: hangover, consumer frenzy, and the harsh reality – Image: Xpert.Digital

After the summit marathon: While the USA goes shopping, Europe fights against irrelevance.

The quiet winner of the week: How Beijing is ruthlessly exploiting the power vacuum after the G20 summit

The last week of November 2025 marks a noticeable break in the global rhythm. After weeks of the world's attention being glued to the diplomatic stage – first at the COP30 climate summit in Belém, Brazil, then at the G20 summit in South Africa – a sobering silence descended during the week of November 24-28. It is the classic "week after": the diplomatic circus has moved on, the spotlights have gone out, and what remains are unpaid bills and vague promises.

While the United States retreats into its cultural shell for Thanksgiving and celebrates Black Friday with a frenzy of consumerism, Europe and Asia are awakening to a changed reality. The EU, once a pacesetter for global standards, finds itself on the defensive, caught between Washington's disinterest and the confident pragmatism of the Global South.

Particularly in Germany, the optimism following the spring elections is now giving way to the harsh realities of winter. The new federal government faces its first real test: the 2026 budget debate forces it to reconcile international commitments with national austerity measures.

This analysis sheds light on a world in transition: from the grand stage of diplomacy to the realities of everyday life, where it will be decided whether the decisions made in Belém and South Africa are worth the paper they are written on – or whether the world's regions will continue to drift apart.

America First, Europe Last? What the silence after the summits reveals about the new world order

This week was marked worldwide by the "hangover" after the summit marathon (COP30 in Brazil and G20 in South Africa), which transitioned directly into the quieter period around Thanksgiving.

The world in the week that followed

The week was overshadowed by two recently concluded major events: COP30 in Belém (ending November 21) and the G20 summit in South Africa (November 22–23). While public life in the US came to a standstill due to Thanksgiving (November 27), Europe and Asia grappled with implementing the summit decisions. In Germany, the first harsh reality check for the new federal government, in office since spring, dominated the discussion surrounding the 2026 budget.

Expert Analysis: What is currently considered 'important' often depends heavily on which continent you open the newspaper on in the morning. To make these different realities tangible, we have selected topics that are viewed strictly from the perspective of their respective regions: What moves people in the USA? What are the topics of discussion in Brussels and Berlin? Which headlines dominate in Asia, and specifically in China?

Our goal is to provide outsiders with an authentic insight into the regional discourse. This overview should help to step outside of specific 'media bubbles' and understand which issues are currently of the highest urgency in the respective societies.

USA: Thanksgiving & “America First” mood

  • Focus: Domestic politics, consumption (Black Friday), disinterest in multilateral agreements.
  • Perception: In the US, this week was almost exclusively dominated by domestic politics. After the G20 summit at the weekend, which was often portrayed in US media as “ineffective” or “far removed from American interests,” everything revolved around Thanksgiving from Wednesday onward.

Topics:

  • Black Friday (November 28): The week ended with Black Friday, considered an important indicator of the US economy under the new administration. Analysts took a close look: Is money flowing freely despite inflation?
  • Post-summit silence: The results of COP30 in Belém played almost no role in the wider US public discourse. The political debate in Washington focused on which international climate commitments would be either not met or renegotiated.
  • Artemis II delay: The disappointment over the postponement of the lunar mission to February 2026 (announced earlier in the year) was still lingering, as a launch in 2025 had originally been hoped for.

European Union (EU): The search for sovereignty

  • Focus: Implementation of the COP30 goals, strategic autonomy, concern for transatlantic relations.
  • Perception: Disillusionment prevailed in Brussels. The EU had attempted to position itself as a "bridge builder" at COP30 and the G20 summit, but encountered the harsh reality of a multipolar world.

who dictated the agenda to the “Global South” (led by Brazil and South Africa).

Topics:

  • Climate finance: The main topic in the EU capitals was how the funds pledged in Belém for forest protection (Amazon Fund) should be reflected in the EU budget.
  • Trade: The protectionist stance of the US was a cause for concern. The EU Commission worked intensively this week on contingency plans for possible new tariffs expected in 2026.

 

Our global industry and economic expertise in business development, sales and marketing

Our global industry and business expertise in business development, sales and marketing - Image: Xpert.Digital

Industry focus: B2B, digitalization (from AI to XR), mechanical engineering, logistics, renewable energies and industry

More about it here:

A topic hub with insights and expertise:

  • Knowledge platform on the global and regional economy, innovation and industry-specific trends
  • Collection of analyses, impulses and background information from our focus areas
  • A place for expertise and information on current developments in business and technology
  • Topic hub for companies that want to learn about markets, digitalization and industry innovations

 

Berlin's first winter test: Can the new coalition manage the balancing act between debt brake and growth?

Germany: Reality check for the new government

  • Focus: Federal budget 2026, energy prices, the “first winter review”.
  • Perception: Germany was heavily focused inward this week. Following the snap federal election in February 2025 and the formation of the government in May, this is the first winter for the new coalition (presumably led by the CDU). The honeymoon is over.

Topics:

  • Budget week: Traditionally held at the end of November, the debate surrounding the 2026 budget was in full swing. The government had to explain how it would reconcile its election promises (economic stimulus) with the debt brake and new international financial commitments (G20/COP30).
  • Energy: With the falling temperatures at the end of November, security of supply once again came into focus. The media intensively discussed whether the new energy partnerships (e.g., with African states, which were strengthened at the G20 summit) would bear fruit quickly enough.
  • Economy: German industry eagerly awaited the impetus. The focus was on the question: Can Germany benefit from the EU's "Green Deal" successor, or will companies continue to relocate to the USA/Asia?

Asia (General): Pragmatism and regional stability

  • Focus: APEC aftermath, economic integration, balancing act between the USA and China.
  • Perception: Asia was still focused on the APEC summit in South Korea (late October/early November), the results of which were now being translated into concrete trade policy. This week, the region appeared to be the most stable pole of the global economy.

Topics:

  • South Korea's role: Following the successful hosting of the APEC summit in Gyeongju, South Korea solidified its role as a technology hub. Several major semiconductor collaborations were finalized this week.
  • Reaction to G20: Many Asian emerging economies welcomed the focus of the South African G20 summit on the global south, but this week called for “actions instead of words” in the reform of the World Bank and the IMF.

China: The “quiet” claim to leadership

  • Focus: Technological leadership, climate diplomacy, year-end economic rally.
  • Perception: China used the week to present itself as a reliable alternative to the volatile United States. After China assumed a key role in the negotiations at COP30 in Brazil, state media celebrated the “victory of multilateralism with Chinese characteristics.”

Topics:

  • Economic objectives: At the end of November, the final push began to achieve the growth targets for 2025. The focus was on domestic demand and high-tech exports (EVs, solar), regardless of Western tariffs.
  • Diplomacy: Beijing emphasized “South-South cooperation” this week. The absence of some top Western politicians from certain events was used to deepen relations with Africa and Latin America (BRICS+).

 

EU/DE Data Security | Integration of an independent and cross-data source AI platform for all business needs

Independent AI platforms as a strategic alternative for European companies - Image: Xpert.Digital

Ki-Gamechanger: The most flexible AI platform-tailor-made solutions that reduce costs, improve their decisions and increase efficiency

Independent AI platform: Integrates all relevant company data sources

  • Fast AI integration: tailor-made AI solutions for companies in hours or days instead of months
  • Flexible infrastructure: cloud-based or hosting in your own data center (Germany, Europe, free choice of location)
  • Highest data security: Use in law firms is the safe evidence
  • Use across a wide variety of company data sources
  • Choice of your own or various AI models (DE, EU, USA, CN)

More about it here:

 

Advice - planning - implementation

Konrad Wolfenstein

I would be happy to serve as your personal advisor.

contact me under Wolfenstein Xpert.digital

call me under +49 89 674 804 (Munich)

LinkedIn
 

 

 

🎯🎯🎯 Benefit from Xpert.Digital's extensive, five-fold expertise in a comprehensive service package | BD, R&D, XR, PR & Digital Visibility Optimization

Benefit from Xpert.Digital's extensive, fivefold expertise in a comprehensive service package | R&D, XR, PR & Digital Visibility Optimization - Image: Xpert.Digital

Xpert.Digital has in-depth knowledge of various industries. This allows us to develop tailor-made strategies that are tailored precisely to the requirements and challenges of your specific market segment. By continually analyzing market trends and following industry developments, we can act with foresight and offer innovative solutions. Through the combination of experience and knowledge, we generate added value and give our customers a decisive competitive advantage.

More about it here:

Exit the mobile version