Key Takeaways
-Global power is increasingly shaped by trade access, energy flows, resources and payment networks.
-Energy chokepoints such as pipelines and the Strait of Hormuz can be used as political pressure points.
-China’s rare earth refining dominance gives it strategic influence over high-tech supply chains.
-OPEC’s shifting structure could make oil markets more fragmented and volatile.
-SWIFT access remains one of the strongest tools of financial pressure in global politics.
Power is no longer measured only by military strength. Today, countries can also use trade routes, oil supply, minerals and payment systems to shape political outcomes.
This shift shows how economic dependence has become a form of leverage. When one country controls something others cannot easily replace, it gains influence without needing direct military action.
Energy Becomes A Pressure Point
Energy remains one of the clearest examples of economic leverage. Russia used Europe’s dependence on natural gas as a political tool, while the Strait of Hormuz shows how one narrow shipping route can affect global oil supply.
When energy flows are disrupted, the impact spreads quickly through inflation, transport costs and market sentiment. That makes oil and gas infrastructure more than commercial assets. They become strategic pressure points.
Rare Earths Create Supply Chain Risk
Rare earths are essential for smartphones, electric vehicles, defence systems and advanced technology. China’s dominance in refining gives it a powerful position in global supply chains.
Even small changes to export rules or licences can create uncertainty for manufacturers. This turns resource processing into a geopolitical tool, especially during trade or diplomatic disputes.
Oil Power Becomes More Fragmented
OPEC has long acted as a global oil thermostat by coordinating supply. But the UAE’s exit signals a shift away from centralised control.
If producers prioritise national revenue over group discipline, oil markets may become harder to predict. That could increase volatility and make energy prices more sensitive to political signals.
Payment Systems Become Financial Chokepoints
SWIFT remains one of the most important networks in global finance. It connects banks across borders and supports international trade payments.
When a country is cut off from this system, its ability to trade becomes severely limited. That is why payment access has become a major geopolitical weapon, and why more countries are exploring alternative systems.
Globalisation Is Being Rebuilt
The world is not fully deglobalising. It is restructuring.
Countries are moving away from purely low-cost supply chains and focusing more on security. Europe is diversifying energy, the US and Australia are building mineral capacity, and China is pushing wider yuan use.
Read how energy, rare earths, oil policy and payment systems are reshaping global power.