May

30

Perplexity says it best:

The U.S. population is projected to keep growing through the end of the century, mainly due to immigration, even as deaths begin to outnumber births after 203325. By 2055, the U.S. is expected to reach 372 million people, with net immigration as the primary driver of growth. In contrast, China faces a rapidly aging population: by 2050, about one-third of its population will be over 65, and the number of elderly will vastly outnumber children, creating an “inverted pyramid” demographic structure. This aging trend is expected to slow China’s growth and strain its social systems, leading some to describe China as “becoming a nursing home” by century’s end. Meanwhile, the U.S., thanks to sustained immigration, will remain younger and larger than it would be from natural increase alone.

Asindu Drileba writes:

Professor Bejan's constructal law guarantee's that China will go bust on a long enough time horizon. I attribute this to China's rigid political system. Like Daenerys Targaryen said, "Those that don't bend, will break." Professor Bejan's TED Talk.

William Huggins responds:

for entirely different reasons, both Daron Acemoglu (econ Nobel 24) and Peter Zeihan are also in the China-bear camp long term - the former due to hitting the limits of "growth under extractive institutions", the latter due largely to demography (even if his tone is alarmist). Dalio's indicators suggest the opposite but all his data comes from a demographic regime of pyramids, not chimneys or inverted pyramids so i'm not sure his forecast will play out.


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