COVID has been a learning experience for all countries across the globe. There is not a single country which was not negatively impacted; mostly in the form of supply-chain disruptions. As a result, countries have been focusing on domestic markets on both sides; demand and supply sides. So at present, their focus is revolving around increasing domestic production as well as consumption. This is more true in emerging economies like India, China, Brazil and South Africa. China is working on increasing domestic consumption while India, South Africa and Brazil are tirelessly working to increase manufacturing in their own domestic markets. However, all four countries of the BRICS bloc are working to increase their export share in global trade and this is pushing the globalisation movement forward.
However, since COVID supply-chain disruptions, many intellectuals have been talking about de-globalisation and predicting that de-globalisation would soon become a new phenomenon. It is quite possible that in the future de-globalisation may become more evident than today, but at present de-globalisation seems to be just another phrase being overused by academia! At least, the data says so.