Think
A quick survey question: Who do you think is more likely to be better off — on top of the pile, if you will — in the year 2025?
The conventional wisdom (what everybody knows) is that
And yet, as management guru Peter Drucker once observed, "What everybody knows is frequently wrong."
Does that mean the
To stretch your mind a little, today we will make the base case for "
To start out, let’s address a contradiction that doesn’t make a lot of sense.
On the Western side, faith in
On the Eastern side, faith in
It is a truly wacky paradox. Everything we have learned about economics, about how markets work and political systems work, points in the direction of "free markets for free men" — the culture that
And yet today, countless Western world investors (who made their wealth in free-market, free-speech environments) are now putting their faith in (drum roll please) a quasi-capitalist, quasi-fascist politburo, where decisions as to what to build and where, and which articles can be run in the newspaper and which can’t, are made by connected government officials!
The assumption is that
The alternative view (regarding political change) is that, even if
But getting back to the "
The crux of the scenario focuses on three things: food, energy and manufacturing.
First up, food:
So what is going to happen, then, over the next decade as
Next up, energy. Once again, a big problem for
But did you know
Is it so hard to imagine an American energy culture switched over from oil to natural gas? A world with natgas hybrid electric cars, and natgas power plants fueling electric generator stations all across the country?
Remember, we are talking about the year 2025 here. Somewhere between now and then, the price of oil will surpass $200 a barrel, perhaps even $300, at which point the heavy infrastructure costs for switching from crude to natty will seem cheap.
But the point is,
The final point to consider is manufacturing. Over the past few years we have seen and heard a great deal about the "
What happens to the manufacturing equation, though, if
Imagine
But with all those Americans out of work, what would happen to manufacturing jobs? They would start coming home! To the extent that
And by the way, for those who expect the dollar’s value to fall to zero and stay there — how does that work in a world where food and energy are scarce with the
How well would grain sell to a hungry world if priced in "worthless" dollars? How quickly would manufacturing jobs return to the
And by the way, we haven’t even touched on America’s capacity to innovate… if someone solves the peak oil problem in a big way by engineering bacteria that eat carbon dioxide and excrete gasoline (a real project), which country do you think will pull it off? If there is a new cleantech and biotech revolution that sweeps the planet, bringing in trillions of revenue from aging humans on every continent, which country do you think will have the innovation lead?
Now, imagine fast-forwarding to the year 2025…
The great dragon, which was supposed to be dominant by now — it is 2025 remember — actually hit a series of snags beginning in late 2011, when the entire Chinese economy imploded under the weight of overcapacity and fraud. China then bounced back from this implosion, as Jim Rogers predicted it would, but quickly ran into further problems of intractable civil unrest, infrastructure problems born of "command and control," and chronic shortages of food and energy that crippled economic output and acted as a huge brake on growth.
A vicious wave of inflation swept through the United States for most of the teens, but a new Paul Volcker stepped up in 2020 and "broke the back" of inflation once again. The benefit of all that inflationary pain was that most of
Could the above not happen? Write in and tell me why it’s impossible. If
China’s food and energy shortages, on the other hand, are only set to become worse — and
Sound crazy? Write in and tell me why it’s crazy.
This isn’t so much a hard prediction, by the way, as a "thinking outside the box" exercise. So much of the commentary today is just ad nauseum repetition of the obvious party lines that it becomes dangerous to one’s health and wealth to listen to it. We must think for ourselves, and be ready for counterintuitive surprises of all kinds.
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