Zoellick, Robert B.2025-10-022025-10-022025-10-01https://hdl.handle.net/10986/43799This paper provides a sweeping historical overview of how geopolitics has shaped economic development and global institutions, culminating in a forward-looking analysis of challenges facing the world in 2025. The paper argues that understanding economic history and the political economy is essential for effective policy making, as geopolitics—encompassing power politics, geography, security, and ecology—fundamentally influences development economics. It traces the dynamic interplay between geopolitics and development across major historical periods: from the European Age of Discovery and the rise of nation-states, through the world wars and the Bretton Woods era, to the Cold War and the age of globalization. It highlights how crises and conflicts have repeatedly transformed global economic systems, spurring new ideas and institutions. Looking ahead, the paper identifies key trends for 2025—fragmented global governance amid ongoing globalization (migration, climate change, and debt), shifting security contexts with territorial disputes and nuclear risks, and the intersection of energy, climate, demographics, and migration with development—as it predicts increased economic nationalism and regionalization in finance and trade. The paper concludes by emphasizing the adaptive role of multilateral institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, advocating for a holistic approach to development economics that integrates political and economic institutions, governance, and both macro and micro markets.en-USCC BY 3.0 IGOECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTPOLITICAL ECONOMYPARTNERSHIP FOR THE GOALSECONOMIC HISTORYDEVELOPMENT ECONOMICSECONOMIC GROWTHStanley Fischer Memorial Lecture: Geopolitics and Development—The World Bank ABCDE ConferenceWorking PaperWorld Bank