Sidestepping the Military Leviathan: Make Money, Not War

Mock-up of planned Russian-Chinese airliner to compete with Boeing and Airbus. To enter service by 2025. Ambitious? Oh yes. Remember when we laughed at Toyota, Airbus, and Trump?

Is Washington really going to start a trade war with China, or is it just huffing and puffing for position? I don’t know. Mr. Trump has inexplicably failed to brief me. A point worth bearing in mind:

The United States cannot compete commercially with a developed Asia, or China.

America has nowhere to go. It is a fully developed economy that cannot grow rapidly if it grows at all. America is also a country of only medium size with a white and Asian population of a bit more than two hundred million who do all the brain work. It has a decaying system of education, declining living standards, and an economy crippled by huge military expenditures.

By contrast China has a billion Han Chinese, intelligent government, a great deal of room to grow and high rates of doing so. The combined land mass, population, and economic potential of Asia are staggering. In differing degrees, Asian nations are growing.

Further, Eurasia is one continent, and China has land connections to all of it–“interior lines of communication,” as soldiers say. America does not. Beijing’s stated intention is to use this to unite Eurasia into one enormous commercial unit—which will not include guess who. Beijing can do this. It has the cash. China is the world’s leader in high-speed rail. As a competent dictatorship, it can decide to do things and then do them, while America often seems unable to do either.

First Direct Fright Train from China to UK Arrives in London.” Chinese rolling stock like the above is becoming common in Europe.  

Some time has passed since Beijing made its first rail shipment from Wuli on the Pacific coast through Kazakhstan, Russia, Belorusa, Poland, to Germany and then left to Madrid. It was clunky and a bit of a stunt. Now there are scheduled trains connecting many Chinese cities to the rest of Asia, including Europe. This will not rival sea transport in volume, but will give a lot of places in Asia access to each other. Influence will follow. Watch.

This is bad news for Washington. Greater trade between Europe and the eastern part of the continent means less influence for Washington. It means potentially very much less influence. European nations have much to gain by trading with the incomprehensibly large markets, current and arriving, between Poland the the Pacific. They have nothing to gain by remaining as sepoy states under American control. Their businessmen know it.

China, already the world leader in supercomputers both in number and performance, hopes to have an exascale machine by 2018, way ahead of the US. These are not people to underestimate.

This dismal reality looks to be behind the orchestrated billingsgate against Russia, the war drums being pounded about the South China Sea, and the obvious desire for war with Iran. These three counties are key to an economic union that, if not stopped, will dwarf the United States. While some hope that China will collapse because of internal problems, this is a thin reed upon which to bet the Empire. Washington knows it.

The Empire can not afford to lose control of Europe’s governments, which will happen if heavy trade is allowed to develop with the Three Bugbears. Thus Washington’s hostility to all three—a hostility whose chief effect, note, has been to drive them together against America. Not good. The first rule of empires is Don’t let your enemies unite.

Here we come to a crucial difference between American and Chinese foreign policy. Washington’s approach to maintaining the Empire has consisted of military attack, threats of military attack, military occupation, and the imposition of sanctions. These are visibly declining in effectiveness. The US currently has sanctions against North Korea, Cuba, Iran, and Russia—none of which has produced the desired capitulation. Unless Washington comes up with something quick, presumably a shooting war or a trade war, its aircraft carriers will steam in circles, slowly rusting, while Asia grows.

Glimmerings of rebellion appear in many places. In the Philippines, Duterte is snuggling up to China. While Washington may kill him or twist his arm, twenty years ago this would not have been necessary. Malaya recently bought Chinese naval vessels. Thailand has begun buying Chinese arms. Countries are slowly abandoning the dollar. German businessmen want to trade with Russia.

Trump now proposes sanctions on China, having said the he would impose a tariff of forty-five percent on goods from there. Perhaps he was lying, bluffing,  or posing in the standard manner of politicians. Maybe he wasn’t. I am not so foolish as to think I can predict the course of a trade war, but neither am I so foolish as to believe that Trump can.

He seems to have the instincts of a bully, which works, or may work, with weak states like Mexico. China isn’t one. He has said that China needs the US more than the US needs China, and so China will surrender. This was also said of Cuba, North Korea, Iran, and Russia. The US remains superior to China in all sorts of things, but a lot fewer than before. A trade war won might prove less desirable than a trade war not started. We remember Pyrrhus for a reason.

China begins operating world’s largest radio telescope.” A friend, more patriotic than observant, recently spoke of China as “900,000,000 illiterate peasants.” I suggested stronger coffee. 

If only for reasons of vanity, Trump couldn’t let China get away with calling his bluff. Millions have died over wounded vanity. What could he do? Go for an all-out trade war? Again, risky. Proud countries dig their heels in. China is not without options. By simply turning to Airbus as exclusive provider to its large and growing market, it would wreak havoc on Boeing and its work force and perhaps marginalize the company. Add that Israel may not allow Boeing to sell to Iran, which would be a further blow.

It is interesting to consider recent PISA scores, which measure the academic performance of school kids.  Math scores in order by country: Singapore, Hongkong, Macao, Taiwan, Japan, China. The US was well below average for the countries tested, though its scores are lowered by minorities. Headline: “NY Professor Says Algebra Is Too Hard, Schools Should Drop It.” On fairness, America leads in safe spaces, trigger warnings, puzzled diversity, and whimpering Snowflakes. Watch out, Beijing.

A trade war might come down to whose population can better tolerate want. The deplorables who shop at Walmart are already stretched pretty tight and would not react well to being further impoverished for what they would see as profits for the Establishment.

If I may briefly reveal my commie tendencies, maybe America ought to worry about its universities, roads, laboratories, and medical care instead of wasting its money on corruption, bombers, lunges for empire, and dreams that 1955 is just around the corner.

China has launched the world’s first quantum-crypto satellite, presumably intended to get NSA off it back, as transmissions are not usefully intercept able. I’m not sure all of us quite know what we are dealing with. The days when Asia made little paper umbrellas for expensive drinks seem to have ended.

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13 Comments
Iska Waran
Iska Waran
January 19, 2017 12:39 pm

“Is Washington really going to start a trade war with China…?” Start? As Wilbur Ross testified yesterday. We have low tariffs on China, while they have high tariffs against us. We’ve already been in a war. We’re about to stop surrendering.

Ralsballs
Ralsballs
January 19, 2017 12:43 pm

I never knew Fred Reed was from China? Huh, learn something new everyday.

kokoda the deplorable
kokoda the deplorable
January 19, 2017 12:59 pm

Yeah, well China has to be envious of our Regime Change policy.
USA USA USA

Rob
Rob
January 19, 2017 1:26 pm

Yes for sure and I bet they are envious of our totally gay government leadership as well. We got that going for us.

rhs jr
rhs jr
January 19, 2017 2:23 pm

Reform Welfare and Warfare, cut taxes and the US will be able to compete better.

bubbah
bubbah
January 19, 2017 2:53 pm

India has a large number of highly educated extremely gifted individuals, and look how their country is doing.

Fred spoke about IQ before. Given any large population, such as China, or India there will be a small amount born with incredible biological intellectual gifts. So their small minority of gifted students, are much larger in sheer numbers given their huge population. The most prestigious Indian schools were harder to get into than Harvard is here in the US, with much higher test scores. Yet the country remains in shambles.

China’s advantages are also its problems. It has a massive population, many serious issues with long term food production for that population, and well noted pollution problems. They do the funny money game, they produce just to produce. They have gone debt crazy in the past few years. They have one of the most corrupt governments at the local level in the world. China has a long long list of problems, I’m really sick of the fixation. The have serious unemployment problems, racial tensions within, and generally speaking authoritarian gov’t tend to implode eventually.

And as others have noted, we aren’t in a trade war, we had the political/elite class choose to bend over and start losing the trade war in the 90’s. We have been in one, yet our elected officials haven’t actually fought back, but merely claimed globalization would help out everyone eventually–we would just get re-educated to do what exactly? We are never going to be a nation of quantum physicists or computer scientists or scholars, the death knell of physical labor jobs lost to things like the back-hoe are a real long term problem. Technology is destroying jobs and income, yet global population is 4 billion more than the 1950’s. This isnt’ a story that has a pleasant ending, that’s why people are floating things like Universal income and such. It’s not just the workless that will struggle to find work, many smart people also struggle to find decent paying jobs. That’s why Gov’t has become such a fiefdom, it has a lot of protections and pays better than the majority of things out there.

High Test score humans aren’t some panacea of wealth. Creativity, persistence, risk-taking, freedom from gov’t interefence and regulations all can help. Ultimately, this piss poor job outlook will continue to remain so, even with a low tax brackets and other Trump promises, jobs will most likely be in the 2-4 million range, yet we really would need about 30+ full time jobs to really patch the hole. The BLS counts about 30 million people as full-time despites working less than 32hrs a week.

Tom S.
Tom S.
January 19, 2017 2:55 pm

Looks like Fred is using old statistics and conveniently ignoring China’s awful demographics.

starfcker
starfcker
  Tom S.
January 19, 2017 5:26 pm

The demographic that matters with china is, they have about 300 million extra military age men that eventually they are going to have to unleash on somebody. Glad we don’t live in that neighborhood. Fred, you continue to disappoint.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
January 19, 2017 3:48 pm

“High Test score humans aren’t some panacea of wealth”
Actually they are. GDP/capita is very tightly correlated with IQ, and extremely so when you throw out nations that have been living on western developed hydrocarbon deposits.
America’s advantage has been that our smart people are more creative and less constrained by society and government. A few million pages of federal and state regulations have put a serious crimp in that creativity, and loads of low IQ immigrants are making things worse rapidly.
Notably, the Chinese allow zero immigration except by other Han Chinese, so they don’t have that problem.

bryan
bryan
January 19, 2017 6:35 pm

We have not been in a trade war. Our elites threw us (the working class) under the bus in hopes of selling every Chinese a coca cola.
We have all f the markings of a declining empire. The common good was thrown overboard for the “Greed is Good” philosophy. Those who think Trump will be able to turn this leviathan around will be sorely disappointed.

Angus
Angus
January 19, 2017 7:42 pm

Fred needs to stop mixing his tequilla with Mexican water. Its effects on him are all too obvious. He’s been sounding like Bernie Sanders for quite some time.

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
January 19, 2017 9:42 pm

The notion that America’s future lies with Asia and not with Europe is at least a century old. This idea drove policy during the interwar years (WW 1 and 2) and is the reason the US so vehemently opposed Japanese “aggression” against China. When the US engineered itself into WW2, the official policy was Asia first, then Europe. This is why most of US naval assets were placed in the Pacific; we threw everything we had against the Japanese from the very beginning. In this regard Fred is just regurgitating stuff he probably read when he was in college.

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
January 21, 2017 3:09 am

There are BRILLIANT Chinese. There are retarded Chinese, and everything in between, just as every other race. Fred has “yellow fever” to a degree.
China will always be hamstrung by a certain set of problems, and I’m sure I don’t know all of them. But for every genius scientist / engineer / computer geek, there are ten who got through their exams on memorization, as rote memory is still a significant force in Chinese education, even at the university level. We had a Chinese doctorate as a post-doc back in my Master’s program, and he was hopeless. It made the rest of us cringe to hear the department chair tear his work apart:
“What have you done this week? These graphs are meaningless – you are charting noise! They certainly don’t prove what you claim, and drawing a straight line through a shotgun blast because the software told you to is worthless! You are wasting your time and my money doing experiments that prove nothing and collecting data that shows nothing! When will you decide to pursue science instead of mathematical delusions?”
China may yet prove us all wrong, but as long as power controls knowledge as a means to retain power, it won’t be anytime soon.