WILL CHINA
IMPLODE? EXPLODE?
By way of
metaphor: As Mr. Gailey said to Judge Harper in Miracle on 34th
Street, “You Honour, I would like to read the following facts into the record.”
- The Chinese calendar goes back about 6.000 years.
- The major portion of the Great Wall took about 400 years to build.
- China was closed to the outside world until President Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger opened up China to the West in 1972.
- In 40 years, China has grown to become the second largest and fastest growing economy in the world.
- China has a population of about 1.3 Billion people.
- China elevated about 500.000.000 people from poverty to the middle-class.
Despite the
fact that the above is common knowledge, it would appear that there are many who knows
all about China but either understands little or pretends to. The latter turn everything that comes out of
China into a media event in order to sell stocks or to sell bonds, or to sell
books, or to jack up their ratings to justify charging more to advertisers who sell diet
books and clown food.
A few years
ago, I quipped, “When the numbers out of China are bad, the Wall Street experts
gloat. When the numbers out of China are good, the Wall Street Experts doubt
the numbers.”
Today?
“When the
numbers out of China are bad, the Wall Street experts advise everyone to ignore
the numbers. When the numbers out of China are good, the Wall Street experts
call it a bubble.”
Then, too,
we have the clichés, slogans, and platitudes.
Hard
landing, soft landing, housing bubble, risk on, risk off, and so on.
When the eventual
negative impact of China’s one-child policy was discovered by the West, the
experts consoled themselves by predicting an eventual disaster for China
arising from an aging population. I
said, “China will change the policy.” They did.
When experts
said, “China has a housing bubble,” I said, “China has a housing inventory.”
Experts have
prognosticated every possible scenario that would result in a disaster for
China. I said, “China will succeed
because China will do as we did and not as we say.”
Then we have
the irony. The people who disparage
China for having a “controlled economy” discuss the Chinese economy as if China
can’t control its own economy when a glitch arises.
One expert
said, China has a housing bubble, China had a stock market crash, China is
attempting to control its currency. I
turned to my wife and said, the experts were saying that about us not too long
ago.
When I said,
China will succeed because China will do as we did and not as we say, I was
referring to:
- China building a hydro-electric power dam;
- China building a super-computer,
- China building a high-speed rail system.
This because:
- We, built the Hoover dam,
- We built super-computers,
- We built the Trans-Continental Railroad.
We went to
Africa and to Latin America to do business.
China is going to Africa and to Latin America to do business.
We built the Panama Canal.
China is building
the Nicaragua Canal.
The only
question we must ask is this: Can China sustain a model with an increasingly affluent nation
without a major reset?
How long can an
affluent society continue to become more affluent without that society
asserting itself or, at the very least, transforming?
Europeans
migrated to the U.S.
Africans and North
Africans are migrating to Europe.
Soon,
the Chinese will migrate. Where to? That
remains to be seen.
Now, in my
lifetime, the world population grew from 3.5 billion people to 7 billion (+)
people. Which paradigm will manifest
itself?
1. The world population grows another 3.5
billion people in 50 years to a world population to 10.5 billion people.
2. The world population doubles in the next 50
years to a total world population of 14 billion people.
3. A pandemic or other natural disaster causes a
global humanitarian crisis.
Back to
China.
The
increasing affluence results in a resistance to constraints on personal
aspirations.
The affluent
seeking cheaper labour outsource jobs, creating an increasing economic
disparity between the haves and the have nots.
The rising
middle class transforms into a consumer class, into an investor class, into a
collective investment fund, and begins an escalating “financial migration”, a
migration of economic power.
China
deploys its military to protect its global economic and diplomatic interests.
Recall our
own history…again.
- The US Military in Europe in the forties.
- The US Military in Korea in the fifties.
- The US Military in Vietnam in the sixties.
- The US Military in the Middle-East today.
The only
focus should be this: Can China continue to embrace our historical paradigm in
a 21st century world? Especially
since Emerging Nations are no longer targets for colonial powers. At least not in the traditional sense.
In addition, with the modification of the one-child policy to allow for a second child, the rising Chinese population will, of necessity, extend beyond the borders of China.
- Other Challenges China Will Face:
- The Decline & Rise of the Russian Economy
- The Rising Indian Economy and Technology Evolution
- African nations forming an Economic Union
- Possible rising US militarism as a response to real or perceived threats from around the globe.
In addition,
do not forget: Democracies are designed
to last about 200 years.
Empires Go Through Stages.
The Scottish Historian, Alexander Tyler, wrote in 1787 that there are the following stages:
- Bondage to spiritual faith
- Spiritual faith to courage
- Courage to liberty
- Liberty to abundance
- Abundance to complacency
- Complacency to apathy
- Apathy to dependence
- Dependence back into bondage.
The two main
differences between then and now:
1. The stakes are much higher.
2. The price
of failure is more severe.
With 7 billion people, the internet and other forms of technological advances, more powerful weapons, and complacency, what will happen over the remaining 85% of the 21st century; of the first century of the new millennium?
Will China explode upon the global political, diplomatic, and economic scene?
Will China implode, unable to sustain the weight of its own success?
Will the world adjust to a new normal—one where we capitulate to or resign ourselves to the need to cooperate in order to survive—to embrace co-operation as a means to a benefit for all despite that it will require compromise?
What will
happen will begin to unfold before our eyes. However, if history is any
teacher, we will define what we see to conform to what we want to see.
“That you cannot predict the future is not the proper rebuff
to the person who says, get off the tracks—there’s a train coming.” ~ Slim
Fairview.
If you find anything here to be helpful, please don't hesitate to send me a really tricked out Mac Book and to tuck a few dollars into the envelope along with the thank you note. Sincerely, Slim.
Or GoFundMe
Bob Asken
Box 33
Pen Argyl, PA 18072
If you find anything here to be helpful, please don't hesitate to send me a really tricked out Mac Book and to tuck a few dollars into the envelope along with the thank you note. Sincerely, Slim.
Or GoFundMe
Bob Asken
Box 33
Pen Argyl, PA 18072
Warmest
regards,
Slim.
Slim.
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