May

15

I went to China recently. What I saw and nearly all the people I talked to were not happy about the economic situation there and almost everyone thinks Xi is stupid.

Humbert A. responds:

This has been the status quo since pre-Covid times imo.

David Lillienfeld writes:

Peter Drucker observed that the problem with totalitarian regimes is that with only one person in charge and no one in a position to offer alternatives/challenge that individual, there is no means of identifying and developing managerial talent in a society and the society inherently slows until the person in charge dies and there is a contest/market for new leadership. There will be problems showing in China soon enough–it has a demographic hurdle coming and it shows no signs of having any idea how to deal with it. It has lots of domestic health issues that will likely cost it considerably within the next decade. Maybe Xi will demonstrate Drucker as being wrong, but I doubt it. Barely three decades ago, the concern in the US was that Japan was about to walk all over the US. It didn't. I'm not sure that China is going to do any better.

Asindu Drileba writes:

This is my exact suspicion.
1950s to Soviet collapse — US Vs Russia (Narrative is Russians will take over USA)
1980s to Asia Currency Crisis — USA Vs Japan (Narrative is Japan will take over USA)
Early 2000s to Present — USA Vs China (Narrative is China will take over USA)

Peter Ringel adds:

There is a perverse stickiness to it. I grew up in one of these shit-holes ( not Japan ! ) - East Germany in my case. All the models and all the data point to implosion. And then it takes decades and centuries and more. And finally, when it collapses everyone is surprised, and no one was expecting it.


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