Globally, the post-war economic framework that sustained decades of relatively tame inflation and financial equilibrium is losing its guarantees. What once seemed permanent—the structural forces keeping prices in check and economies on steady ground—can no longer be assumed to hold. The consensus that anchored monetary policy and investor behavior for generations faces mounting pressure as old assumptions crack. Whether the system's underpinnings remain intact or fracture further will reshape not just traditional finance, but the entire landscape of alternative assets and risk management strategies. The stakes have never been clearer: stability itself is now up for grabs.
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Globally, the post-war economic framework that sustained decades of relatively tame inflation and financial equilibrium is losing its guarantees. What once seemed permanent—the structural forces keeping prices in check and economies on steady ground—can no longer be assumed to hold. The consensus that anchored monetary policy and investor behavior for generations faces mounting pressure as old assumptions crack. Whether the system's underpinnings remain intact or fracture further will reshape not just traditional finance, but the entire landscape of alternative assets and risk management strategies. The stakes have never been clearer: stability itself is now up for grabs.