Confronting The Fragility Of Global Order And The Crisis Of Institutional Trust


Nikhil Kamath talks to Yuval Noah Harari At Davos


The acclaimed investor and entrepreneur Nikhil Kamath sat down at Davos with historian and bestselling author Yuval Noah Harari to examine a defining question of our time

FinTech BizNews Service

Mumbai, 13 February 2026: In a year marked by geopolitical strain, rising polarization, and deepening skepticism toward institutions, the acclaimed investor and entrepreneur Nikhil Kamath sat down with historian and bestselling author Yuval Noah Harari to examine a defining question of our time: what sustains global cooperation when trust begins to erode, and what does it mean to remain human in an age increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence?

Recorded on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, the conversation moved beyond daily political developments to address structural concerns facing modern civilization. As alliances shift and democratic systems face internal pressures, the durability of institutions that underpin global order is increasingly under scrutiny.

Harari argued that large scale human cooperation has always depended on shared belief in

institutional frameworks rather than force alone. Financial systems, nation states,

international agreements, and legal structures function because people collectively trust

narratives that extend beyond individual leaders. When that shared trust weakens,

predictability declines and stability becomes fragile.

Historian and bestselling author Yuval Noah Harari

“Humans control the world not because we are stronger than other animals, but because we

cooperate better. And cooperation depends on storytelling,” Harari said.

A central theme of the discussion was the growing shift from institutional loyalty to

personality driven politics. When political commitments become personal rather than

structural, long term agreements lose resilience. Harari cautioned that democracy depends

not only on elections, but on confidence in processes, shared facts, and institutional

continuity.

The exchange also examined how emerging artificial intelligence systems may influence

governance, authority, and the production of meaning itself. Beyond economic disruption,

the question raised was more fundamental: as machines increasingly generate information

and narratives, how do societies preserve human agency and shared truth?

Reflecting on the dialogue, Kamath drew parallels between markets and geopolitics,

emphasizing that both are ultimately systems of confidence.

“If trust is the foundation of finance, it is also the foundation of geopolitics,” Kamath said.

Set against the backdrop of Davos, where global leaders convene to debate growth, conflict,

and cooperation,

the episode positions People by WTF within broader conversations about institutional

resilience, democratic durability, technological transformation, and the future architecture of

global order.

Full episode available on YouTube.

People by WTF

People by WTF is a global podcast platform hosted by Nikhil Kamath, featuring in depth

conversations with leaders across business, policy, technology, culture, and academia. The

show examines long term institutional and economic questions shaping global society. Past

guests include Elon Musk, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Bill Gates, Nandan

Nilekani, Ranbir Kapoor, and Kumar Mangalam Birla.

Cookie Consent

Our website uses cookies to provide your browsing experience and relavent informations.Before continuing to use our website, you agree & accept of our Cookie Policy & Privacy