GWU/Bank of Italy Roundtable 2025

Friday, October 24, 2025 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
A hand holds out a digital globe surrounded by icons representing globalization and an interconnected world

On 24 October 2025, Banca d’Italia will host a scientific roundtable on The Digital Economy Amid Rising International Tensions in Rome, in partnership with the George Washington University Competition and Innovation Lab. The event will explore the evolving dynamics of the digital economy in the context of tense international relations and technological interdependence.
 

The roundtable will open with remarks from Andrea Brandolini, Director General for Economics, Statistics and Research at Banca d’Italia, and will feature three scientific sessions followed by a keynote address.
 

The first session, AI Supply Chains and Global Interdependence, will investigate the architecture of artificial intelligence (AI) supply chains, comprising five interdependent layers: hardware, cloud infrastructure, training data, foundation models, and applications. The discussion will focus on the economic forces that shape these layers—such as economies of scale, technological shifts, market concentration, and strategic behavior by dominant actors—highlighting the growing influence of large technology firms and the geopolitical leverage embedded in AI infrastructure.
 

The second session, Digital Trade Fragmentation, will address the rising complexity of global digital trade. While some countries pursue regulatory harmonization and cross-border interoperability, others adopt restrictive policies driven by economic, political, or security objectives. The session will assess how such divergence affects the global flow of digital services, data, and ICT goods, and the broader implications for international economic cooperation.
 

The third session, The New Frontiers of Lawfare and Tech Sovereignty, will examine how regulation and digital policy is increasingly being considered as a leverage tool for international relations. Drawing on recent developments, including a U.S. government memorandum outlining foreign digital policies considered discriminatory, the session will explore the tensions arising from diverging regulatory approaches. The case of foreign direct investment in Europe will serve as a focal point to discuss the strategic trade-offs between short-term economic benefits and long-term risks related to data security, economic dependency, and the control of digital and physical critical assets.

 

Download the full agenda here

Agenda

TimeSession
8:45 AMRegistration
9:00 AMIntroduction
Riccardo Cristadoro (Banca d’Italia - Head of the International Relations and Economics Directorate)
9:10 AMWelcoming Address

Andrea Brandolini (Banca d’Italia - Director General for Economics, Statistics and Research)
9:20 AM

Session 1 - AI Supply Chains and Global Interdependence

Chair: Michele Mancini (Banca d’Italia)


• Christophe André (OECD) “Developments in Artificial Intelligence Markets”
• Vili Lehdonvirta (Oxford Internet Institute) “Weaponised interdependence in a bipolar world”
• Vatsala Shreeti (BIS) “AI Supply Chains”
• Torrecilla Carlos (Joint Research Centre - Innovation Policies and Economic Impact Unit) “Regional impact of Artificial Intelligence – Insights from JRC research”

10:50 AMCoffee Break
11:05 AM

Session 2 - Digital Trade Fragmentation

Chair: Alessandro Borin (Banca d’Italia)


• Eddy Bekkers (WTO) “AI, Trade and Growth and the Agreement on E-commerce”
• Enrico Marvasi (Roma Tre University) “Digitalization and Regionalization of Global Value Chains in European Industries”
• Lorenzo Bencivelli (Banca d’Italia) “Cybersecurity and trade fragmentation”
• Néstor Duch-Brown (Joint Research Centre - Digital Economy Unit) “The fragmentation of the European Digital Single Market”

12:30 PMLunch Break
1:30 PM

Keynote Speech

Paul Nemitz (College of Europe) “Central Banks, Data Protection and International Data Flows”

2:15 PMCoffee Break
2:30 PM

Session 3 - The New Frontiers of Lawfare and Tech Sovereignty

Chair: Giovanni Veronese (Banca d’Italia)


• Tommaso Giardini (Digital Policy Alert) “Geopolitical tensions in the regulation of the digital economy”
• Martina Ferracane (EUI; Teesside University) “Adequacy club: legal pathways for cooperation amid trade tensions”
• Oscar Borgogno (Banca d’Italia) “At the crossroads of competition, monetary sovereignty and international tensions”
• Federica Marconi (Istituto Affari Internazionali) “FDI Screening in the Digital Age: Addressing Economic Security Concerns Amid Growing International Instability”

4:00 PMClosing Remarks

 

 

Where
Bank of Italy Centro convegni Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, Via Nazionale 190 Rome, Italy DC 20052

Admission
Open to everyone.


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