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The Empty Tower Syndrome: Commercial Real Estate Faces Reckoning

Defaults on office building loans have reached a 15-year high, forcing cities to rethink their downtown zoning laws.

Marcus Thorne
By Marcus Thorne
Published April 21, 2026 • 9 min reading
The Empty Tower Syndrome: Commercial Real Estate Faces Reckoning

A view of the global marketplace in early 2026. Credit: Editorial Library / Reuters

The landscape of global trade is undergoing its most significant transformation in decades. As we navigate the mid-2020s, the traditional models of hyper-globalization are giving way to something more fragmented, yet perhaps more resilient.

For years, the mantra was efficiency at all costs. Just-in-time manufacturing drove down prices but increased vulnerability. Today, the new buzzword is "friend-shoring"—building supply chains within geopolitical alliances rather than purely economic ones.

"We are not seeing a retreat from globalization, but a radical redefinition of it. Geography matters again."

The Rise of Regional Blocs

New economic alliances are forming as nations prioritize regional stability over global integration. This shift is particularly evident in the semiconductor and renewable energy sectors, where national security concerns now outweigh price advantages.

Economists at the International Policy Bureau suggest that this decoupling could lead to a 'dual-track' global economy. One track consists of the high-tech, deeply integrated Western-led bloc, while the other features a resource-rich, manufacturing-heavy alternative network.

What does this mean for the average consumer? In the short term, potentially higher prices as supply chains are rerouted. But in the long term, a more robust system that can withstand the shocks of climate events or political instability.

Marcus Thorne

About Marcus Thorne

Former financial analyst turned journalist, Marcus focuses on emerging markets and global trade dynamics.

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