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So who'll be left holding the bag? The Chinese, on account of pollution and other externalities they don't count at the moment? The transnats, on account of pursuing monetary wealth that ceases to be meaningful when the states that underwrite it start inflating their currencies? Third countries who accepted suddenly worthless dollars for feeding their resources into the Chinese industrial plant? The Americans, by finding most of their tangible assets in the hands of transnats? Some combination?
Or have I missed something fundamental?
- Jake Friends come and go. Enemies accumulate.
... but note that while the transnational corporations require the impossible, in the sense of ever rising share of global income, when there is a maximum attainable share of global income, and further that the maximum sustainable share is likely less than the maximum attainable share, so they are quite likely to overshoot then crash.
By contrast, the Chinese do not have to keep up the pace indefinitely. They are navigating a demographic transition, and sometime in the current generation the number of new entries into the labor force will start dropping.
Obviously the American economy, and the military industrial complex in particular, are set up to be the biggest losers, precisely because of the focus on marshaling political support while taking the economic sustainability of their growth regime for granted.
If we go full cycle into a system of international political economy dominated by a relatively small number (three or four) of regional clusters, I imagine the successful transnationals will evolve into regional trading bloc champions. I've been accused of being a Marxist, yet while Harpo's my favourite, it's Groucho I'm always quoting. Odd, that.
The transnats who plan ahead will attempt to capture tangible assets, rather than leave their fortunes in paper money, because when the music stops, the value of paper money will be a matter of political negotiation.
Trying to grasp what the world will look like on the other side of such a fundamental discontinuity is, I think, more in the realm of tea-leaf reading than political analysis.
Its reasonable to presume that the less dystopian scenarios will involve a rise of regional blocs, since that's what's tended to happen before. It is, after all, not the first time in the world-system that a wave of globalization under the cover of a capitalist hegemony has come to an end, and it seems to be more or less variations on a theme. I've been accused of being a Marxist, yet while Harpo's my favourite, it's Groucho I'm always quoting. Odd, that.
They are in a race, and whether they end up as winners in some sense depends on how effectively they manage the demographic transition. However, they are doing just about everything they can do, with all of the choices facing them involving hard trade-offs and genuine uncertainty how much bad to accept for how much good on either side of the choice ...
... and, sure, it could all come unraveled.
However, they might keep on juggling plates without too many crashing down and without falling off the high wire that they are driving their unicycle across. Its not a static question of where they have arrived, its a dynamic question of whether they can keep the plates on the air and the unicycle wheel on the wire.
There is, however, a possible viable future, with their current demographic track meaning a falling population level by the next generation, and their real economy at least gaining the ability to make things that countries with the resources they need may be interested in having.
For transnationals looking to maintain and buid on their present position of strength, it does depend on how effectively they acquire effective military force, doesn't it? Because when it comes down to it, when there is a dispute over property titles across large number of borders, the ability to move a squad of soldiers into the property and boot out the interlopers, from the perspective of that side of the negotiating table, is the strong hand when it comes to property rights.
This is, of course, another reason for those of us with a commitment to liberal democracy to invest in resilient local economies in sub-Saharan Africa. The big transitional World Wars tend to get started in a region of soft states on the periphery of the main actors ... Italy in the Napoleonic World War, the Balkans in WWI, eastern Europe and Southeast Asia in WWII (the long cycle people have more examples, those are the ones that come to mind). The EU already has multiple stakeholdings in Sub-Saharan Africa, the US is heavily dependent on Africa oil, and the Chinese, of course, are busily building up their influence, swapping manufactured goods on easy credit terms for access to raw materials. I've been accused of being a Marxist, yet while Harpo's my favourite, it's Groucho I'm always quoting. Odd, that.
For transnationals looking to maintain and build on their present position of strength, it does depend on how effectively they acquire effective military force, doesn't it?
East India Company, meet Weyland-Yutani... You do have a talent for thinking up decidedly unpleasant scenarios...
You do have a talent for thinking up decidedly unpleasant scenarios... - Jake
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