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How to Confront an Advancing Threat From China

onthebottom

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Thoughtful.....

How to Confront an Advancing Threat From China

How to Confront an Advancing Threat From China
Getting Tough on Trade Is Just the First Step

July 18, 2019
The most important international development of the last two decades has been the rise of China as a great economic and military power. As China transformed, many Western scholars and policymakers predicted that economic reform and integration into the world economy would force the country to liberalize politically and become a “responsible stakeholder” in the international system. The idea, sometimes called “convergence theory,” was that as China grew wealthier, it would become more like the United States.

The theory was comforting, but it did not pan out. China grew economically without democratizing. Instead its government became more ideological and repressive, with military ambitions that are not just regional and defensive but global and designed to intimidate. And as the distinction between civilian and military technology gradually eroded across the globe, Chinese President Xi Jinping made it official policy for Chinese companies to put all technology at the disposal of China’s military. As the Princeton University scholar Aaron Friedberg has written, “What Xi Jinping and his colleagues have in mind is not a transitional phase of authoritarian rule to be followed by eventual liberalization, but an efficient, technologically empowered, and permanent one-party dictatorship.”

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Let’s face it: Xi has killed the notion of convergence.

China is enormously important to the United States—for reasons both positive and negative. American companies highly prize its huge market, which is a crucial engine of growth for the world economy. But we cannot allow our strong interest in good economic relations with China to blind us to Beijing’s hostile political intentions. The Chinese government defines itself as a foe of Western liberal democracy and the upholder of its own brand of communist nationalism. Its strategic ambitions are unfriendly, far-reaching, and deeply rooted in an authoritarian worldview.

Americans look with deep regret on the choices Chinese leaders have made. For decades, the United States strove to cultivate friendship. Presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan both worked to forge cooperative ties through the transfer of high technology to support modernization and economic growth. The United States helped China enter the World Trade Organization on lenient terms. We gave it access to our markets even though China did not reciprocate. China’s increasingly hostile policies cannot be explained as a reaction to unfriendliness from our side.

A PRINCIPLED FOREIGN POLICY

Since the end of World War II, the United States has been the world’s greatest power by almost any measure: economic output, scientific discovery, military strength, and cultural influence. Since the start of the Cold War, and especially since the Soviet Union’s disintegration in 1991, the United States has commanded a degree of power and influence unmatched even by the Roman or British Empire. But the United States is not an empire. Ours is a democratic country that takes pride in respecting the rights of other countries and peoples. In foreign policy, we don’t always live up to our principles, nor do we always make the wisest decisions. But we don’t just do whatever we can get away with, either.

One principle that guides U.S. foreign policy is that countries should respect what belongs to other countries. After World War II, the United States provided aid to rebuild Germany and Japan. We didn’t steal the resources of either country. More recently, when we led the coalition that overthrew Saddam Hussein, we spent great sums to help rebuild Iraq. We didn’t steal a drop of its oil.

China wishes to usurp our country’s leadership role, certainly in Asia and evidently in the rest of the world as well.
At home, Americans live under the rule of law. Our laws are not just tools of the powerful but constraints on power. This understanding of the law shapes the way Americans think and act and the way we operate in world affairs. We respect private contracts—and we expect others to do the same. We respect property rights, including for intellectual property. We believe in moving forward technologically by inventing and innovating, not by stealing other people’s ideas and reverse engineering them.

The United States has helped to build and protect an international system in harmony with such principles. By helping to maintain international peace and stability, enabling free navigation by sea and air around the world, and creating global communications and computer networks, the United States has led the world economy to spectacular growth since World War II. If the United States did not play this leadership role, life would be far worse for Americans and for countless others. Our lives would be more constricted and less safe. Our liberties would be under pressure. China wishes to usurp our country’s leadership role, certainly in Asia and evidently in the rest of the world as well.

WHAT’S BEST FOR THE PARTY IS BEST FOR CHINA

Only a few decades ago, China was a poor, undeveloped country. Then, in the late 1970s, it began to reform its economy. Beijing observed the success of market economies and applied their lessons, with stunning results: in 1980, China’s gross domestic product was $200 billion. Last year it was 70 times that—more than $14 trillion. As a result of this amazing boom, other developing countries began to see China as a model. Admirers lauded its combination of selective free-market practices and centralized guidance from a government that was decisive and farsighted. Often, these admirers overlooked the intensity of China’s authoritarianism. Of course, it’s easier for dictators than for leaders of democratic countries to act decisively and to take a long view.

As impressive as its growth has been, however, China now faces serious difficulties. It has spawned environmental disasters and created immense social dislocations that could eventually fuel political unrest. Huge numbers of people have moved from the countryside into dangerously polluted cities, but the government hasn’t permitted them to get housing or education. China’s economy has also slowed. In 2018, the official growth rate was the lowest in nearly 30 years, and the official rate very likely overstates the actual growth rate.

China’s authoritarian leaders fear that free Chinese people would oust them from power, as free people have done throughout the world.
China’s authoritarian leaders fear that free Chinese people would oust them from power, as free people have done throughout the world. One way Chinese leaders manage the threat to their rule is by provoking crises abroad and appealing to their people’s nationalism. The result is a vicious cycle of repression and potential instability that makes the world a more dangerous place. Another way China’s leaders manage the threat to their rule is by creating an Orwellian surveillance state: Xi has concentrated unprecedented power in his own hands, using facial recognition and big-data technologies to monitor huge masses of people. For the same reason, his government now strives for world leadership in 5G networking and artificial intelligence.

China’s leaders primarily seek not the betterment of their people but the preservation of Chinese Communist Party (CCP) rule. For them, politics outweighs all other considerations. Many Americans have a hard time grasping this reality because it’s not how we think about our own country. Our Declaration of Independence says that the government’s highest aim is to secure the rights of individuals to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Politics in the United States serves, and is subordinate to, freedom, including economic freedom. In China, it’s the other way around. Economics serves politics, and the political goal is to strengthen the government’s power at home and abroad.

NO MORE BUSINESS AS USUAL

In past decades, CCP strategists debated the merits of various paths to national greatness. Some championed bide-your-time policies that encouraged private-sector growth and emphasized integrating China into the world economy. Their ultimate goal was to increase the power of the party and the military, but to do so in a manner that would make China’s rise seem unthreatening to the rest of the world. Other strategists advocated a more assertive, nationalistic, and militaristic approach.

Under Xi’s leadership, the latter approach has clearly prevailed. His government has seized islands in the South China Sea and built military facilities on them, in violation of promises to former U.S. President Barack Obama (among others) not to militarize. It has punished Vietnam, the Philippines, and Indonesia over maritime disputes, cutting their underwater acoustic cables and attacking their fishing fleets. It has violated Taiwan’s airspace and kidnapped dissidents and critics in Thailand, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. Those kidnapped include citizens of Sweden and the United Kingdom.

Those doing business in China in high-tech fields are advancing Beijing’s military interests, regardless of their intentions.
Chinese officials say they have no interest in the politics of foreign countries, but their habit of bribing foreign officials has ignited corruption scandals in Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Angola, and elsewhere. China’s Belt and Road Initiative, Xi’s signature initiative to extend loans and build infrastructure around the world, relies heavily on corrupt financing arrangements that burden foreign governments with debt they cannot afford to repay. In addition, China subverts academic freedom in universities in the United States and elsewhere through its government-funded Confucius Institutes. These organizations spread propaganda and sometimes manage to squelch discussion of topics embarrassing to China, such as the conquest of Tibet and the camps in Xinjiang Province, where Beijing claims to be “reeducating” an estimated one million Chinese Muslims, known as Uighurs.

The Chinese government also systematically directs Chinese companies to steal intellectual property from U.S. and other foreign companies, according to the U.S. Justice Department. In addition, it requires private Chinese companies to share with the military any technologies they acquire through innovation, purchase, or theft. The new civil-military fusion policy announced by Xi in 2015 effectively requires all privately owned Chinese companies to work for the military. That means business with Chinese companies is no longer just business. Those doing business in China in high-tech fields are advancing Beijing’s military interests, regardless of their intentions.

A NEW STRATEGY FOR A NEW STRUGGLE

Since the United States emerged as the world’s leading power, we have never had to contend with a potential military challenger that was also our most important trading partner. In the Cold War, we confronted a Soviet Union whose economy was a fraction of the size of China’s today. History offers no close analogies, but that doesn’t mean it offers no lessons.

During the Cold War, our government crafted new policies and programs to check Soviet military technological progress and weaken the Soviet economy. These included export control and trade promotion programs that served national security purposes. We created the U.S. Information Agency, which countered Soviet propaganda, and the Strategic Defense Initiative, which aimed to neutralize the Soviet Union’s long-range nuclear-armed missiles. We also established programs to encourage higher education in relevant areas—for example, the Russian language and nuclear weapons technology.

To counter Chinese threats to U.S. vital interests, it is necessary for us to think creatively and courageously—and without any illusions about our adversary’s intentions. To begin with, we should revise our regulations on trade and investment, especially in the high-tech sector, so that China can no longer exploit our openness. In general, I dislike government interference in private business. But our national security takes precedence over free-market policies. Adam Smith made this point in The Wealth of Nations, arguing that Great Britain’s interest in preserving naval supremacy was more important than free trade in the maritime sector: “Defense,” he wrote, “is of much more importance than opulence.” With China committed to taking military advantage of all private commercial activity, we must alter the lens through which we examine U.S. regulation of foreign trade, international supply chains, inward investments, intellectual property protection, and incentives for critical defense technologies. The necessary regulation will be expensive and onerous, but it is the price we must pay to secure our country.
 

Polaris

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Oct 11, 2007
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Thoughtful.....
You know the term "fake news"?

Haley has always been a dummy, and she is providing "fake analysis".

I read this article before, and decided to read it again. Both times cannot find any useful information.

Since day 1 of the People's Republic of China, the United States has been trying to undermine it.

Read recently that of those 70 years, the United States had some sort of embargo against China of one sort or another for 40 years. LOL!

What's Haley saying? Just do the same thing? She so dumb, she did not even know her own country's history with that other country.

That is the problem with the American government. They listen to people that say the dumbest shit, such as Saddam has nukes, and then they get those same dumb people to carry out that shit.

Then when shit happens, they act surprised!

People in China who read this article from Haley, would just scratch their heads.

Alright onthebottom ...

Huawei and the US government war against it, that is a topic alluded by Haley. What does Hauwei really need from the USA? What American tech does Huawei still need?

Here are four sources of information, including three independent analysis of Hauwei products.

If anyone cares to read them, they can make up their own minds.

https://seekingalpha.com/article/4267530-huawei-u-s-suppliers-stay-away-now

https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2019-trade-war-us-china-technology/

https://asia.nikkei.com/Economy/Tra...ei-latest-model-shows-reliance-on-US-sourcing

https://finance.yahoo.com/video/exclusive-huawei-ceo-says-company-142617289.html
 

Darts

Well-known member
Jan 15, 2017
23,061
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You know the term "fake news"?

Haley has always been a dummy, and she is providing "fake analysis".

I read this article before, and decided to read it again. Both times cannot find any useful information.

Since day 1 of the People's Republic of China, the United States has been trying to undermine it.

Read recently that of those 70 years, the United States had some sort of embargo against China of one sort or another for 40 years. LOL!

What's Haley saying? Just do the same thing? She so dumb, she did not even know her own country's history with that other country.

That is the problem with the American government. They listen to people that say the dumbest shit, such as Saddam has nukes, and then they get those same dumb people to carry out that shit.

Then when shit happens, they act surprised!

People in China who read this article from Haley, would just scratch their heads.

Alright onthebottom ...

Huawei and the US government war against it, that is a topic alluded by Haley. What does Hauwei really need from the USA? What American tech does Huawei still need?

Here are four sources of information, including three independent analysis of Hauwei products.

If anyone cares to read them, they can make up their own minds.
I'm glad you spoke up. I thought the article painted a way too positive image of the U.S. and a way too negative image of China. The truth is somewhere between the two.

Couple of points.

1)China has at least one (some say as many as 20) university the equal of MIT. China is past the point where they need to "steal" technology from the West. The Chinese students we see in Canada are the ones whose applications to Chinese universities were declined.

2) China gets all the oil they need without getting their soldiers killed.
 

danmand

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Nov 28, 2003
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The simple fact is that China is ascending and USA is declining.

This is among other factors alao due to the fact that China seeks cooperation with other countries (the belt and road initiative covers 40% of the eart's population) while USA use sanctions and military power .
 

Conil

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Apr 12, 2013
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Not to do what Trudeau is doing. Trump is the only one standing up to the Chinese.
 

apoptygma

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Dec 31, 2017
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America is no longer a world power.
And in a few short years will be irrelevant.

See: Babylonian, Ottoman, Roman Empires, etc...
 

apoptygma

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Dec 31, 2017
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Been hearing this drivel for decades .....
Yep... I'm sure the Babylonians, Ottomans, Romans, etc, woke up one morning and said "today is the day our Empire falls".
Are you intentionally ignorant, or is it natural for you?
 
O

OnTheWayOut

Yep... I'm sure the Babylonians, Ottomans, Romans, etc, woke up one morning and said "today is the day our Empire falls".
Are you intentionally ignorant, or is it natural for you?
You should hope your prediction is wrong because if the US does poorly so will Canada. Or did you forget about the symbiotic relationship?
 

Big Sleazy

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Sep 13, 2004
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Never should have moved all our industry to China. Now our middle class is eviscerated. And Nikki Haley is an idiot. Blaming China for allowing the Banks and Corporate America to move all the jobs offshore is calling the kettle black.
 

apoptygma

Well-known member
Dec 31, 2017
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You should hope your prediction is wrong because if the US does poorly so will Canada. Or did you forget about the symbiotic relationship?
My hopes don't matter. Neither do yours.
Nice attempt at avoiding the inevitable though.
Do you live with your eyes closed, with your fingers in your ears, in a cave?
 
O

OnTheWayOut

My hopes don't matter. Neither do yours.
Nice attempt at avoiding the inevitable though.
Do you live with your eyes closed, with your fingers in your ears, in a cave?
I live just fine, thanks for asking. You seem bitter, everything ok on your end?
 

Darts

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Jan 15, 2017
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Empires come and go (even the mighty Islamic Empire will fall one day) but China has been around for 5,000 years. China is a living organism (orgasm?) that has learned how to evolve and adapt and survive.
 

Polaris

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Oct 11, 2007
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Not to do what Trudeau is doing. Trump is the only one standing up to the Chinese.
What do you mean by that?

This is a serious question. Since I fully expect to not read a serious reply to that in the Liberal media, perhaps you can share your thoughts, give some input on what does standing up to China is suppose to mean for the USA or the west for that matter.

I give you an example.

Electric vehicles. China is the world leader in electric vehicles. The entire bus fleet of Shenzhen is all electric. That will go nation wide.

Two reasons why Chinese companies are leading the electric vehicle industry.

1. The combustion engine is complex compared to the electric car engine. All those joint ventures and the Chinese car companies never caught up to European or Japanese car makers, as they kept on investing and China was always playing catch-up. But the electric car is a new industry where everyone starts from scratch and the Chinese pounced on that business opportunity.

2. The battery for the electric car, China basically all of it the last time I read. They have the tech, and they bought all the lithium around.

How is the United States going to "stand up" to China, over something like the electric car industry. Is the United States gonna tell China you cannot have any electricity? Maybe the United States can work on a world wide embargo of lithium against China.

Last two weeks, in the news, Renaut, Toyota, BMW, Telsa, they were all in the news regarding existing deals or new deals with the Chinese in China for more electric cars. Is the United States going to stand up against all those guys too?

Last time I read is that the Europeans are legislating their countries to have more electric cars. They have a vested interest to see their European car companies succeed with that. Their operations in China could be replicated in Europe. How is the United States going to stand up against that?

Why will the United States stand up against that?

For the Europeans, the United States, just in the way on this issue.

That we can find the United States not in step with it traditional allies, on many more issues, around trade, security, even values!

:pizza:
 

Polaris

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2007
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hornyville
I'm glad you spoke up. I thought the article painted a way too positive image of the U.S. and a way too negative image of China. The truth is somewhere between the two.

Couple of points.

1)China has at least one (some say as many as 20) university the equal of MIT. China is past the point where they need to "steal" technology from the West. The Chinese students we see in Canada are the ones whose applications to Chinese universities were declined.

2) China gets all the oil they need without getting their soldiers killed.
Thanks for reading.

China graduates a lot of STEM students. Forget actual numbers, but probably they graduate 4 times more that the USA.

I don't think it is about oil. In the past, great power competition was able gaining resources and opening markets. The current Liberal order of the world, current provides that with the WTO.

The future ... will be a little different.

This is an article that tries to explain the forces producing what comes next.
 

Polaris

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Oct 11, 2007
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July 19, 2019

The coming Age of Chaos

By Frederick Kuo

On the grand boulevards of Paris, men and women donning yellow vests have rocked the French capital for months in the shadow of glorious landmarks like the Arc de Triomphe. What began as a rebellion against rising fuel taxes soon transformed into a mass movement against a slew of austerity measures and economic realities squeezing the French working class.

Since the end of World War II, most of the world has been dominated by the US-led liberal world order. Although the Yellow Vest movement represented neither the right nor the left, the popular anger against the political establishment was enough to hand the once-marginal far-right National Rally party of Marine Le Pen a slim victory in the recent European parliamentary elections. However, the results were less a vote of confidence for Le Pen than a frustrated rejection of President Emmanuel Macron and the neoliberal establishment, leaving the path forward just as murky, a clear sign of the times.

The events in Paris are only a small symptom of the massive disruptions enveloping the globe. The world order that we have known since the end of World War II is coming to an end. For decades, the neoliberal world order led by Washington promised that the mantra of free trade, democracy and unbridled capitalism was the way to global prosperity and stability. For decades, this model was unchallenged. US power dominated the world and the American middle class prospered and thrived, reinforcing the legitimacy of the system at home.

Now, this world order is quickly being unraveled before our eyes as new realities are rapidly being established spurred by three powerful currents: the rise of a geopolitical multipolarism, the Fourth Industrial Revolution, and rising socio-economic inequality.

The rise of a multipolar world

The recent and unprecedented ban on Huawei by the administration of US President Donald Trump was a decisive sign that the trade war with China had shifted from resolving a trade imbalance into a brazen attempt to throttle China’s tech ambitions. Although much had been written about the dangers of the “Thucydides trap” that increasingly defined the dynamic of Sino-US relations, the two nations had for the last decade and a half largely avoided that fate by operating within a carefully crafted framework.

The intensification of Trump’s trade war is a decisive recognition that China represents a major challenge to US domination and that the room for cooperation has become eroded by a sense of intense rivalry. With two highly nationalistic administrations at the helms of Beijing and Washington, hopes for long term compromise between the two powers are dimming.

The rise of Chinese technology is just one factor fracturing the predictability of the old world order. What has transpired in the last two decades has been a monumental shift of the global economic center from the West to the East. While China is by far the greatest catalyst of this movement and the only nation-state capable of matching the US as a peer power at this time, the “rise of the rest” or the continued growth of Asia and Africa will fundamentally change trade flows and the balance of power. China’s Belt and Road initiative was designed to be both a facilitator and a beneficiary of the shifting gravity towards the East, which is a trend that is irreversible.

The combined blocs of Eurasia and Africa represent more than 6.4 billion people, a large majority of the global population. With the expansion of infrastructure and connectivity between these continental blocs, global trade and commerce is quickly shifting to the East. Twenty-six years ago, 62% of global trade was among developed countries. Now that share is down to 47% and trade between developing countries has accelerated tenfold.

We are rapidly moving toward a world that resembles less the post-Cold War order of a sole superpower than the intense inter-state competition among rival powers that precipitated the two World Wars. Aside from China, other powers such as Russia, Brazil, India and an increasingly independent Europe, whether as the EU or as independent European states, will jostle for space and influence alongside and against the United States. A new era of rapid economic growth will transform Africa, a geographically massive continent with a dramatically rising population base, into a major emerging market.

Global wealth and power is being reshaped throughout the world in unprecedented ways and away from a Western-centric order.

Fourth Industrial Revolution

We are currently on the cusp of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, which will see the mass adoption and development of artificial intelligence, connectivity and robotics. With the advancement of fifth-generation (5G) technology, which will revolutionize the capacity of devices to communicate with one another, and exponential investments into AI research and development, expect nothing less than a massive disruption in established economic and labor structures.

In the coming decades as AI and robotics progress by leaps and bounds, our lives, from the jobs we work, to the way we travel, to the way we communicate will be fundamentally changed.

This technological progress will provide immense opportunities that few of us may conceptualize today. For example, before Internet usage became widespread, how many people could envisage the rise of smartphones, apps, the sharing economy and the associated opportunities thereof? However, every stage of massive technological disruption will inevitably also be coupled with great social dislocation as entire careers and businesses are invalidated.

With the advance of 5G technology, connectivity and communication among devices will reach a plateau that will mark a radical reorientation of technology’s role in society. The very nature of artificial intelligence and robotics threatens to increase significantly the redundancy of human labor as the exponentially increasing capabilities of technology masters ever more skillsets in order to improve corporate efficiency. Therefore we may be entering an age where economic growth and corporate profitability continue to skyrocket while labor participation continues to shrink.

This may lead us to a point where the value of a human population base lies not in its value as a labor force but largely in humans’ ability to consume the goods and services of these largely AI-powered industries. In this scenario, the division between an elite asset-owning capitalist class and the much larger consumer class may widen to the point that massive social unrest is the result.

Systemic paralysis and rising inequality

To say that liberal democracy as we know it is currently facing a crisis is an understatement. Beginning with the shock election of Trump and the Brexit referendum in 2016, the rise of the far right and the far left, the happy marriage of corporate power and the values of liberalism is being rejected by an increasing wave of voters.

In the recent European Parliament elections, the once-marginalized extreme right represented by Le Pen and Italy’s Matteo Salvini made significant headway into the mainstream. The US, once the champion of liberal democracy, is now dominated by an administration that espouses an agenda of ardent nationalism, while the opposition Democratic Party is at risk of falling to self-proclaimed socialists who are just as anti-establishment as the nationalist right wing.

Western democracy is undergoing a systemic paralysis. Many of the political systems in the Western world face a crisis of inaction, of incessant infighting and a lack of competency in bringing about meaningful change that marks a recognizable improvement in the life of its citizens. In Europe, stagnant economies threaten well-established social-welfare systems with austerity, a trend that will likely increase and continue to feed increasing protests and societal chaos.

The United States, on the other hand, has enjoyed massive GDP growth and wealth building over the past decade, with massive fortunes being accrued in the fields of technology and finance. However, socio-economic inequality is reaching levels not seen since the Gilded Age.

In 1989, the wealthiest 10% of Americans owned 61% of all wealth; now they own 70%. The share of the poorest 50% of Americans had declined from 4% to 1% in 2018. While incomes in the US have certainly grown in the past several decades, the actual income earned by the middle class is rather stagnant when compared with rising inflation and astronomically exorbitant living and housing costs in the large urban areas, known as Superstar Cities, where high-paying jobs are increasingly concentrated.

With the onset of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, which will all but guarantee that increasing wealth and economic growth will largely benefit the owners of technology and assets, socio-economic inequality is nearly absolutely guaranteed to be a rising cause of instability.

Rising dissatisfaction with the status quo is expressing itself in the rejection of neoliberalism through the democratic process. Although it is clear that neoliberalism is dying as Western democracies become more unequal, more divided, more paralyzed and more angry, it is not yet clear what the replacement would be. However, once fringe movements like nationalism and socialism move into the mainstream and as these increasingly conflicting ideologies clamor to seize power, the evolving political culture will likely be fraught with turmoil.

Entering the age of chaos

After the fall of the Soviet Union, eminent political scientist Francis Fukuyama penned his famous book The End of History proclaiming that liberal democracy represented the final chapter of human history. However, history has kept moving and it increasingly appears that the chapter of Liberal Democracy is ending with no prediction of what lies ahead.

We are living in a period of exponential change. On the stage of global geopolitics, the last five centuries of near-complete Western domination is drawing to a close, quickly being replaced by a multipolar world where Western societies are forced to compete and interact with non-Western societies as peers. This new multipolar reality will cause a massive shift of consciousness that few in the West have prepared for.

The transition from a unipolar order to one where several peer powers jostle for power and influence will lead to a significant escalation of tension and unpredictability in the world order. While the chances of a repeat of the global violence that we witnessed in the 20th century remains low because of the ironically fortunate advent of nuclear weapons and the potential of mutually assured destruction between peer rivals, increasing hostility and rivalry between peer states, particularly between the US-led order and the Sino-Russian sphere, is likely to reach fever pitch.

The rising chaos of external factors such as great-power competition that many societies will face in this less stable world order will be matched by the rising chaos of internal factors driven by technological disruption, political dysfunction and increasing social inequality. As technological progress continues unabated with the unprecedented advancement of artificial intelligence, connectivity and automation, the threat of social displacement and an extrapolated rise in wealth inequality is real.

Combined with frustration over the paralysis of our political systems and social division, the catalyst for chaos and disorder is potent. What this means is that the forces that have already begun gnawing against the foundations of liberal democracy will be significantly reinforced. Unfortunately, aside from marginal voices like Democratic presidential hopeful Andrew Yang, who advocates that Universal Basic Income be instituted to combat rising automation, public discourse has barely even begun to grasp the significance of these issues on the future of the societies we live in.

Today, we live in a period of relentless change where the assumptions that were once unquestioned are radically being challenged. The age-old ballasts of power both within and without national borders are being redrawn faster than our collective consciousness can catch up. In summary, we are entering an age of chaos, and it is guaranteed to be interesting.

https://www.asiatimes.com/2019/07/opinion/the-coming-age-of-chaos/

:yield:
 

Darts

Well-known member
Jan 15, 2017
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One big question looms.

What will China do with all that USD debt? Will the U.S. ever repay it?
 

whiteshaft

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July 19, 2019

The coming Age of Chaos

By Frederick Kuo

On the grand boulevards of Paris, men and women donning yellow vests have rocked the French capital for months in the shadow of glorious landmarks like the Arc de Triomphe. What began as a rebellion against rising fuel taxes soon transformed into a mass movement against a slew of austerity measures and economic realities squeezing the French working class.

Since the end of World War II, most of the world has been dominated by the US-led liberal world order. Although the Yellow Vest movement represented neither the right nor the left, the popular anger against the political establishment was enough to hand the once-marginal far-right National Rally party of Marine Le Pen a slim victory in the recent European parliamentary elections. However, the results were less a vote of confidence for Le Pen than a frustrated rejection of President Emmanuel Macron and the neoliberal establishment, leaving the path forward just as murky, a clear sign of the times.

The events in Paris are only a small symptom of the massive disruptions enveloping the globe. The world order that we have known since the end of World War II is coming to an end. For decades, the neoliberal world order led by Washington promised that the mantra of free trade, democracy and unbridled capitalism was the way to global prosperity and stability. For decades, this model was unchallenged. US power dominated the world and the American middle class prospered and thrived, reinforcing the legitimacy of the system at home.

Now, this world order is quickly being unraveled before our eyes as new realities are rapidly being established spurred by three powerful currents: the rise of a geopolitical multipolarism, the Fourth Industrial Revolution, and rising socio-economic inequality.

The rise of a multipolar world

The recent and unprecedented ban on Huawei by the administration of US President Donald Trump was a decisive sign that the trade war with China had shifted from resolving a trade imbalance into a brazen attempt to throttle China’s tech ambitions. Although much had been written about the dangers of the “Thucydides trap” that increasingly defined the dynamic of Sino-US relations, the two nations had for the last decade and a half largely avoided that fate by operating within a carefully crafted framework.

The intensification of Trump’s trade war is a decisive recognition that China represents a major challenge to US domination and that the room for cooperation has become eroded by a sense of intense rivalry. With two highly nationalistic administrations at the helms of Beijing and Washington, hopes for long term compromise between the two powers are dimming.

The rise of Chinese technology is just one factor fracturing the predictability of the old world order. What has transpired in the last two decades has been a monumental shift of the global economic center from the West to the East. While China is by far the greatest catalyst of this movement and the only nation-state capable of matching the US as a peer power at this time, the “rise of the rest” or the continued growth of Asia and Africa will fundamentally change trade flows and the balance of power. China’s Belt and Road initiative was designed to be both a facilitator and a beneficiary of the shifting gravity towards the East, which is a trend that is irreversible.

The combined blocs of Eurasia and Africa represent more than 6.4 billion people, a large majority of the global population. With the expansion of infrastructure and connectivity between these continental blocs, global trade and commerce is quickly shifting to the East. Twenty-six years ago, 62% of global trade was among developed countries. Now that share is down to 47% and trade between developing countries has accelerated tenfold.

We are rapidly moving toward a world that resembles less the post-Cold War order of a sole superpower than the intense inter-state competition among rival powers that precipitated the two World Wars. Aside from China, other powers such as Russia, Brazil, India and an increasingly independent Europe, whether as the EU or as independent European states, will jostle for space and influence alongside and against the United States. A new era of rapid economic growth will transform Africa, a geographically massive continent with a dramatically rising population base, into a major emerging market.

Global wealth and power is being reshaped throughout the world in unprecedented ways and away from a Western-centric order.

Fourth Industrial Revolution

We are currently on the cusp of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, which will see the mass adoption and development of artificial intelligence, connectivity and robotics. With the advancement of fifth-generation (5G) technology, which will revolutionize the capacity of devices to communicate with one another, and exponential investments into AI research and development, expect nothing less than a massive disruption in established economic and labor structures.

In the coming decades as AI and robotics progress by leaps and bounds, our lives, from the jobs we work, to the way we travel, to the way we communicate will be fundamentally changed.

This technological progress will provide immense opportunities that few of us may conceptualize today. For example, before Internet usage became widespread, how many people could envisage the rise of smartphones, apps, the sharing economy and the associated opportunities thereof? However, every stage of massive technological disruption will inevitably also be coupled with great social dislocation as entire careers and businesses are invalidated.

With the advance of 5G technology, connectivity and communication among devices will reach a plateau that will mark a radical reorientation of technology’s role in society. The very nature of artificial intelligence and robotics threatens to increase significantly the redundancy of human labor as the exponentially increasing capabilities of technology masters ever more skillsets in order to improve corporate efficiency. Therefore we may be entering an age where economic growth and corporate profitability continue to skyrocket while labor participation continues to shrink.

This may lead us to a point where the value of a human population base lies not in its value as a labor force but largely in humans’ ability to consume the goods and services of these largely AI-powered industries. In this scenario, the division between an elite asset-owning capitalist class and the much larger consumer class may widen to the point that massive social unrest is the result.

Systemic paralysis and rising inequality

To say that liberal democracy as we know it is currently facing a crisis is an understatement. Beginning with the shock election of Trump and the Brexit referendum in 2016, the rise of the far right and the far left, the happy marriage of corporate power and the values of liberalism is being rejected by an increasing wave of voters.

In the recent European Parliament elections, the once-marginalized extreme right represented by Le Pen and Italy’s Matteo Salvini made significant headway into the mainstream. The US, once the champion of liberal democracy, is now dominated by an administration that espouses an agenda of ardent nationalism, while the opposition Democratic Party is at risk of falling to self-proclaimed socialists who are just as anti-establishment as the nationalist right wing.

Western democracy is undergoing a systemic paralysis. Many of the political systems in the Western world face a crisis of inaction, of incessant infighting and a lack of competency in bringing about meaningful change that marks a recognizable improvement in the life of its citizens. In Europe, stagnant economies threaten well-established social-welfare systems with austerity, a trend that will likely increase and continue to feed increasing protests and societal chaos.

The United States, on the other hand, has enjoyed massive GDP growth and wealth building over the past decade, with massive fortunes being accrued in the fields of technology and finance. However, socio-economic inequality is reaching levels not seen since the Gilded Age.

In 1989, the wealthiest 10% of Americans owned 61% of all wealth; now they own 70%. The share of the poorest 50% of Americans had declined from 4% to 1% in 2018. While incomes in the US have certainly grown in the past several decades, the actual income earned by the middle class is rather stagnant when compared with rising inflation and astronomically exorbitant living and housing costs in the large urban areas, known as Superstar Cities, where high-paying jobs are increasingly concentrated.

With the onset of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, which will all but guarantee that increasing wealth and economic growth will largely benefit the owners of technology and assets, socio-economic inequality is nearly absolutely guaranteed to be a rising cause of instability.

Rising dissatisfaction with the status quo is expressing itself in the rejection of neoliberalism through the democratic process. Although it is clear that neoliberalism is dying as Western democracies become more unequal, more divided, more paralyzed and more angry, it is not yet clear what the replacement would be. However, once fringe movements like nationalism and socialism move into the mainstream and as these increasingly conflicting ideologies clamor to seize power, the evolving political culture will likely be fraught with turmoil.

Entering the age of chaos

After the fall of the Soviet Union, eminent political scientist Francis Fukuyama penned his famous book The End of History proclaiming that liberal democracy represented the final chapter of human history. However, history has kept moving and it increasingly appears that the chapter of Liberal Democracy is ending with no prediction of what lies ahead.

We are living in a period of exponential change. On the stage of global geopolitics, the last five centuries of near-complete Western domination is drawing to a close, quickly being replaced by a multipolar world where Western societies are forced to compete and interact with non-Western societies as peers. This new multipolar reality will cause a massive shift of consciousness that few in the West have prepared for.

The transition from a unipolar order to one where several peer powers jostle for power and influence will lead to a significant escalation of tension and unpredictability in the world order. While the chances of a repeat of the global violence that we witnessed in the 20th century remains low because of the ironically fortunate advent of nuclear weapons and the potential of mutually assured destruction between peer rivals, increasing hostility and rivalry between peer states, particularly between the US-led order and the Sino-Russian sphere, is likely to reach fever pitch.

The rising chaos of external factors such as great-power competition that many societies will face in this less stable world order will be matched by the rising chaos of internal factors driven by technological disruption, political dysfunction and increasing social inequality. As technological progress continues unabated with the unprecedented advancement of artificial intelligence, connectivity and automation, the threat of social displacement and an extrapolated rise in wealth inequality is real.

Combined with frustration over the paralysis of our political systems and social division, the catalyst for chaos and disorder is potent. What this means is that the forces that have already begun gnawing against the foundations of liberal democracy will be significantly reinforced. Unfortunately, aside from marginal voices like Democratic presidential hopeful Andrew Yang, who advocates that Universal Basic Income be instituted to combat rising automation, public discourse has barely even begun to grasp the significance of these issues on the future of the societies we live in.

Today, we live in a period of relentless change where the assumptions that were once unquestioned are radically being challenged. The age-old ballasts of power both within and without national borders are being redrawn faster than our collective consciousness can catch up. In summary, we are entering an age of chaos, and it is guaranteed to be interesting.

https://www.asiatimes.com/2019/07/opinion/the-coming-age-of-chaos/

:yield:
A very interesting article indeed.
Thanks for sharing it.
 
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