National interest rules, everyone else bows: Trump's lessons from Davos
Columnists
By
Patrick Muinde
| Jan 24, 2026
For billions of people across the world, this past week would quietly pass as another five days in the count down towards the end of January blues. However, for the world’s big boys and girls, it was one of the most consequential weeks in setting the world economic agenda for 2026. The 56th World Economic Forum (WEF) convened at the remote Swiss town called Davos, which hosts the event each year.
Curiously, the forum convenes at a time when the world’s poor and middle class are at their lowest after the Christmas festive damages to their pockets. Implicitly, this highlights one of the main criticisms leveled against the forum as an elite club that’s completely out of touch with reality for the majority of the people of the world that it purports to speak for.
The interim co-chair for this year’s forum, Larry Fink, admitted as much in his opening remarks. He is quoted saying that most of the people affected by what they would be talking about in Davos will never get a chance to attend the conference. According to information on the WEF website, this year the conference attracted over 3,000 delegates from more than 130 countries, including 64 heads of government or state, 850 international CEOs and Chairpersons and 100 unicorns and technology pioneers.
Despite the conference theme this year been ‘A Spirit of Dialogue’, the scheduled topics for the five days were clearly out of the league for poor countries like Kenya and most of Africa. The US President, Donald Trump, the conference’s top speaker, acknowledged as much, referring to the delegates as a convergence of who is who in government, industry, academia and society.
In reality, it is not practical for this column to summarize all the insights from the several speakers of the conference. Therefore, this article will limit itself to key takeaways from President Trump’s speech at the conference. Like in all other high stakes international forums, the US President attracts almost a full house session. It was not different in Davos 2026. There are five key takeaways from President Trump’s address.
One, economic power not only wins anytime but also rules the world. In ordinary diplomatic circles, it is inconceivable that any leader can get away with openly discussing official but private conversations with other leaders of government or state, captains of industry, his predecessor and serving public officers in their own government. To make matters worse, Trump appeared not to have bothered to find out which key leaders would be in attendance for his scheduled session or remember the names of some of the leaders he was talking about.
I took time to go through the entire speech, generated by AI from the audio recording. This is collaborated by listening partially the official audio recording of the conference proceedings during his speech shared on WEF’s website. The word ‘stupid’ in context referring to other leaders, his predecessor and serving public officers appears on several occasions in the about 1.5 hours speech.
One can only imagine what was going on through the minds of these other leaders as they listened to their private memes been broadcast life to the world. As if intended to add more salt to an already sore wound, several of these mentions refers to how he forced tariffs on other countries, implying that the rates were completely arbitrary numbers, not backed by any policy evidence. Further, he implied to have really enjoyed hearing foreign leaders literary begging for leniency. Where they would not yield, business leaders from those countries went to him begging.
Despite the sensitivity of the tariffs and their potential impact on both the US itself and the victim countries, Trump seems to get away with such lambasting of other leaders. This speaks to how deep the excesses of those with economic power can be excused by both their victims and the rest of the world. Simply put, those who have the money rule the world on their own terms.
Two, is the suggestion that there exists different cultures for or against development. According to President Trump, America and Europe have a shared cultural heritage that is pro-development, and only reflected by a few other allies in the East. To protect their economic and security interests, the western economies must therefore unite to stop importation of foreign cultures that have failed to build successful societies of their own.
On this account, the Minnesota scam was his jewel to the world of how these foreign cultures have caused pain to what the West has built. Kenya must have had a lucky escape not to have been entwined with Somalia during his speech. Many other countries, including key US allies like Canada, France, United Kingdom and the host of the conference Switzerland were not as lucky, especially over the tariff war.
Obviously, Russia and China were among the few enemies he targeted that must not be allowed near the Northern Hemisphere. For this reason, the Kingdom of Denmark and NATO allies must surrender Greenland as a small token in return for the billions the US has invested helping the rest of the world.
On this claim of anti-development cultures, unfortunately Trump assertions seems to have some truth. Otherwise, how would one explain that a continent like Africa, endowed with minerals and climatic conditions that the rest of the world can only dream of, remains the world’s poorest, many years into self-rule? Why do African leaders and their allies plunder public funds, even for essential services that are supposed to preserve basic human dignity for their people?
Three is that Trump unapologetically affirms that only national interest matters in global geopolitics. The US leader may have used unpalatable language to other leaders and nations, however, one must give credit to him for the fact that he represents the true American spirit. The constant throughout his entire speech at Davos was the advancement of national interest for America and the socio-economic welfare of Americans.
If anyone does not like it, then they can go and throw themselves into the sea for as long as Trump cares. This is the painful truth that underlies the motives behind cross-border engagements. It thus becomes a solemn obligation for any leader to protect the interests of her people and preserve their national heritage in international geopolitics. It is tragic, when our leaders prioritize private interest over nation interest in such fora’s.
Four is the potential realignments of global capital flows. According to Trump, the USA has received an estimated US$18 trillion of capital investment commitments in the past one year in office. Implicitly, it is not just American corporations that are shifting capital back home but also foreign investors trying to beat tariff barriers imposed on their countries.
While Trump was full of self-pontification, if this data is proved to be true, then the world may be out to experience a serious capital flow re-alignment. Historically, the US has exploited their monetary policy autonomy to repatriate foreign capital through borrowing from countries holding huge dollar reserves at very low interest rates. Physical capital flows into America will complete the US control of the Balance of Payments macroeconomic factor.
Finally, the world must ready itself for a new geo-political order on climate change, international politics and national alignments. Despite Davos 2026 agenda been full of climate change, green energies and peaceful co-existence, President Trump continued his attacks on climate science been a scam, glorifying Americal return to coal and nuclear energy sources and establishing a Board of Peace to compete with the United Nations on global peace agenda and politics. All this signify interesting times ahead for global geo-economic politics!