Jacob Shapiro: I'm still getting questions from people who are normally interested in geopolitics about the possibility of the US or global economy heading towards a banking crisis. Should we be worried about these debt levels? Is this Lehman 2.0?
Give us a sober perspective about our financial situation and I’ll try to play the foil.
Rob Larity: Well first of all, shorting banks seems to be the new big trade du jour. Everyone is looking into shorting banks. I got an email this week all about the regional bank stocks that you can borrow for short-selling (shorting), and how much it costs to borrow them. It came from a service owned by Fidelity that lends out stocks for shorting.
So obviously, that's drawing attention and air from the markets. But frankly, I just don't think it's very interesting. If you look at what's happened in markets in the aftermath of the events of the last few weeks, I would classify it as a healthy normalization.
The credit markets are looking okay. Everything closed down when everyone was freaking out for a few days, but the window for companies that are raising capital or issuing bonds in the United States reopened earlier this week, and on Monday you started to see big companies tiptoe back into that market.
On Tuesday you saw a deluge of companies raising capital again, so things are getting back to normal. We had the Fed meeting yesterday and they did what a lot of people expected them to do - they hedged and raised interest rates.
At the same time, Powell came and gave a press conference with a much more Dovish tone. You can see that they're doing a bit of a balancing act, attempting to control inflation while juggling a financial stability issue at the same time. They’re not going to be raising rates too aggressively because they don’t want to break anything.
From what we've seen, it doesn't look like they've broken anything. People are afraid that we’re in too deep and that the wheels are going to fall off the wagon now, but I don’t think that’s true. The Fed has to balance both a fight against inflation and be cognizant of not freaking people out too much. So they’re in a tricky spot at the moment.
Jacob Shapiro: To lead off with that point, one of the things that came across my desk this week and hit me unexpectedly were the inflation numbers coming out of the United Kingdom. They saw an increase in inflation from 10.1% in January up to 10.4% in February - at least that’s the market narrative.
Food was a big part of that, but even when you stripped out food and energy, inflation was between 5.8% to 6.2%.
The Bank of England responded by raising rates again and said, “We think that inflation is going to come down aggressively over the next half of the year.”
I feel like we’re in an unpredictable place with market narratives and reality.
It's not that a new narrative is taking hold, it's just like this “Seventh Day Adventist” maneuver where they alter the narrative a bit to fit the reality of the situation, “Christ didn’t return this time. It’ll actually happen next year on this date; we just got the day wrong."
They came out and essentially said, "While we're confident that while Chinese demand is not here en force, it'll show upin the second half of the year. Inflation hasn't slowed down quite yet. That's okay. We're still gonna slow down the rate increases and, by the second half of the year, these inflation rates will start to come down pretty harshly."
Now, as I said on the knowledge platform, the UK is a little bit weird because Brexit is happening and when you blow up your relationship with your most important trading partner, you see these weird fluctuations with inflation.
But to your point, it doesn't look like the economy's broken at all. If anything, the things that we're seeing suggest that the economy is doing okay, despite the fact that the Fed is raising interest rates and the SVB situation isn’t actually that dire.
The rejoinder to the whole Silicon Valley Bank thing is, this is not like 2008. One day we thought mortgages and land values were secure, and then the next day they weren't. This was a bank that caters to the tech industry after a period of artificially low interest rates, you would expect to see stress in that part of the economy.
The rest of the economy seems to be doing well, but I don’t wonder if the UK inflation print is a canary in the coal mine. Re-acceleration of inflation would be an event that the market isn't quite prepared for - we haven't fixed any of the structural problems that led to higher prices in some of these areas.
Do you think we actually might see a re-acceleration of inflation in the coming months?
Rob Larity: The short answer is yes. This wasn’t isolated to the UK, Germany also released its PPI (Producer Price Index) numbers this week. PPI are the prices paid by businesses, not by consumers, and they beat expectations by a pretty meaningful amount. So it's fairly widespread where you're seeing these surprising numbers.
We’re seeing more evidence of the durability of inflation and the US is no different. This is one of the big variant views that we have right now, but we think there's a very high probability that inflation does re-accelerate.
Given the current market narratives, I think that'll really take people by surprise.
Tying this into larger trends, we’re seeing an inventory recession in the US.
Inventories are the most volatile part of the business cycle, and in the last few quarters, we've been experiencing an inventory recession because businesses built up inventories very aggressively in the first part of 2022. In large part, they were responding to the shortages that they suffered in late 2021. If you remember Christmas of ‘21, no one could get anything for Christmas because the supply chain snarls screwed everything up. You were getting fruit cakes and things like that coming not until January, February, which screws up your seasonality.
Jacob Shapiro: So strange how I found that Hanukkah was completely unaffected. I wonder what that could be about.
Rob Larity: Everything got screwed up. Businesses over-ordered in 2022 and then they found themselves with too much inventory. They’ve been running it down ever since, especially because everyone expected us to tip into a recession.
And where are we now?
Chinese factories have been totally offline. There are empty cargo ships sitting around. Not long ago we had that story about 108 container ships queued up outside Long Beach waiting to unload because there's this enormous bottleneck in the system, now they're going around empty.
There's no queue, they're just sitting there. We're in a completely opposite scenario, from an inventory standpoint.
At the same time, the businesses that determine how much inventory they're going to build are looking at the economy and increasing their estimates on the durability of demand.
Looking over to the earnings calls that were just completed, businesses are giving pretty optimistic guidance for 2023, they no longer think that it’s the end of the world, expectations are being adjusted upwards.
Things are super volatile in both directions and this is the new normal. If you get normalization back in the positive direction, that's gonna be a significant boost to demand and growth. In turn, that's going to increase goods inflation, which in the last few quarters has been really coming off the boil and helping to dampen overall inflation.
That, plus the labor issues we’re feeling right now could end up being a major problem.
Jacob Shapiro: US consumers are buying more and more things. They're not getting the stimulus checks anymore, they're just putting shit on their credit cards. They've gotten used to whatever standard that they had before, and even if they don't have the cash in the bank account, they're willing to rack up debt.
They approach the concept of debt with the assumption that the government will probably bail them out just like they bailed out SVB.
Turning to the macro side, I wrote a series of pieces back in 2016 about the Italian banking crisis and how non-performing loans and high indebtedness in Italy was going to lead to a crisis in the European Union. I assumed they would have to bail out Italy in the near-term.
Italy figured it out though, and they've been doing fine. Italy even looks like a good growth market, especially with EU recovery funds.
Japan has so much debt and yet it still hasn't collapsed in on itself.
China seems to find more and more debt.
The United States has plenty of debt.
When Covid first started, like March-April of 2020, before I even had Perch or CI or anything else, I was an independent analyst doing my own thing. I put out this piece about how I thought debt levels were going to increase astronomically in the context of COVID, and that was going to be bad for the global economy. I was right that debt levels increased astronomically, but I was totally wrong about the negative consequences.
The US has just found more and more debt. We keep rolling it over.
How would you respond to somebody like me who's coming to you and saying, “Okay, that's all nice, but eventually these things have to be paid back, right? Eventually debt is gonna be an issue.”
Will it be? Is it now? Do we just keep on printing more and it's all numbers on a sheet?
At what point does debt, at the macro level, actually start to affect things?
Rob Larity: It’s an issue.
Some people will argue that debt doesn't matter - Of course it matters!
But you have to think about it in two ways, right?
The first is quite simply, “How does the service of debt impact the income statements of different actors in the economy?
For instance, the US government has to pay interest on its debt. That's money coming out of the treasury's account and going into the accounts of bond holders. How does that affect things? Same goes for individuals, businesses, whatever.
Debt service costs are number one.
Number two is, “How does the psychology of debt impact the decisions that people make?” This one is underrated and incredibly important. There's a term called financial distress costs, which refers to the costs that arise when people or actors who have a lot of debt can behave very differently than they would otherwise.
Let’s get into an example. People often point to Japan in the late 1980’s when Japanese corporations accumulated massive amounts of debt. When the bubble burst in 1991, they spent the next 15 years paying down their debt rather than investing in capacity expansion and the things that lead to growth. That, in turn, created what’s called a balance sheet recession.
Where are we in the US today?
COVID caused debt to explode primarily on the government balance sheet. That’s the public’s balance sheet, and that's really a political question. Is the government changing its behavior? Biden is trying to at least give an impression of controlling the deficit. And so far it's been going okay. Even if the government were to come out and say, "Hey, we're gonna slash government spending and we're gonna raise taxes," I'm not sure that would have a major impact on American life.
The other side is the private sector.
Everyone assumes that US consumers are leveraged to the hilt and they have all this debt. That's not true. The US consumer has been paying down its debt since 2008, if you look at the numbers. Over this whole period, household balance sheets have actually been getting healthier and healthier.
Right now we're in a pretty good state, on average. Of course there are differences for different income levels.
Income and equality has an impact on that because there are some people who have no problem with debt, and then there's a subset of society that is constantly in debt.
Those are longer term issues, which we don't have to get into.
High levels of debt create three different problems. The first is the government one, which everyone talks about and has an opinion on. At what point does that become unsustainable and where's the tipping point?
Many people cite the famous Reinhart-Rogoff study where they claim that once you get over a 100% Debt-to-GDP ratio, you hit a tipping point. I’d like to point out that Academic research has shown that concept to be bullshit. The honest truth is that no one really knows. No one really knows where that tipping point is on the government side.
I think if you were to look for problems with debt today, you should be looking at the corporate sector. In the last five years, corporate profit margins have been very high, just secularly very high.
They've been marching up and up and up since the 80’s, peaked in 2016, then fell off a little bit. But then under Covid, corporate profit margins exploded back up to all time highs because the government was giving free money to everyone.
It's great for business, no doubt about it. The problem is that those margins make your debt load look more sustainable than it really is. Corporations have been taking on a ton of debt in general and they've been benchmarking that.
Here’s how you evaluate the credit risk of a business:
First you look at their EBITDA, which stands for earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. What profit or cash flow can it use to service that debt? That's the denominator.
Then you take their debt load, and that’s your numerator.
If EBITDA is elevated because your margins are artificially/unsustainably high, it makes it look like you can support much more debt than you would otherwise.
That's potentially a major problem. Over here at CI, we think that profit margins have started to revert, going back five or six or seven years to 2016, and that this process is likely to continue. If that process continues, then you're gonna see corporate profitability and the cash flow get squeezed as they utilize them to service that debt.
This is coming to a head with businesses that are refinancing their older, lower interest rate debt with near term debt, at much higher interest rates. If you want to find businesses that have problems, look for debt maturities that are taking place over the next 18 months because they're gonna be in trouble.
The other thing on the corporate side, which we've talked about a little bit, is private equity markets. They’re the other source of over-leveraged debt. Big investors, endowments and foundations have been moving away from public markets and doubling down on private equity in large part because you don't have to market.
Private equity funds tell you their stocks are worth x amount and you get to take that at face value. You don’t have to do much thinking, and those portfolios are performing very well at the moment. So that's really reassuring for those trying to convince their superiors to switch over from these wild public markets.
The first problem is that there's a lot of complacency, which means that a ton of dumb money has gone into private equity at the wrong time. And then there's been too much debt laid on these companies.
When you do an LBO, when you buy a company, you take on debt to buy it. That becomes a problem if you get this reversion and declining profit margins. If you want to know where the complacency is, where the Lehman moment is, it's in private equity markets. It's in endowments.
Some of these large endowments have private equity portfolios worth 30-40% of their total value, which is a big risk if those portfolios are only worth a fraction of their current valuation. There's also a self-reinforcing cycle coming into place now because some of these companies are going under, people are having to sell their positions to get liquidity, and that's making it worse.
Jacob Shapiro: To your point, the asset class that seems most bulletproof is likely to be the most problematic one. The fact that everybody and their mother-in-laws are talking about banks probably indicates to you that banks aren’t the issue. You juts talked about a lot of different scary things, though.
How do those parts of the wheels come together? Is that a timing thing that it's gonna take eight, 12 months for that to exhibit itself? How do you square those two things against each other?
Rob Larity: You have to be able to hold two different ideas in your head at the same time, right?
Some of those things are longer term, and it's not obvious that there's a huge problem yet in private equity. Some of those things are more cyclical and short term. When I'm talking about the inventory cycle and the business cycle, especially now, those have really shortened because of all the choppiness in the market.
You have to be able to manage a short term outlook with longer-term ones that don’t impact you until the whole system starts to fall apart. Watching who falls apart next is the most important thing you can be doing.
Jacob Shapiro: Let’s stop there and do some talking about the markets because Xi Jingping and Vladamir Putin are putting on a bit of a bromance right now. Their choreographed dance was a bit like The Bachelor where they come in, sit down and meet one another, hang out and talk, Putin gets to look up at Xi because he’s so much taller. I’m making fun of them and I should stop.
The big geopolitical news this week is about the doubling down of that relationship and how there are no limits to their friendship. But honestly, that doesn’t add up for me.
One of the things that Russia really wanted was movement on a pipeline that can connect Siberia to China, which they've been talking about for decades. We're talking about Panama Canal level type infrastructure development.
If you're gonna connect Russia's gas fields all the way to the Chinese end user markets. If you could do it, it would be tremendous in terms of linking those two, but don't underestimate the scope of the sort of infrastructure problem there.
China was like, "We're not gonna commit to that, exactly. There's no alliance here." You've probably seen me talk before about how China has no allies. And that is one of the reasons that they're so weak in the Indo-Pacific. One of the reasons China doesn't have allies is because they don't want allies.
They reject the idea that the United States has with our, "We need the security environment. We need to have all these defense treaties and things like that."
China doesn't like it that way. In some ways, China's very George Washingtonian about it. They don't want foreign entanglements. They just want everybody to be pragmatic and do their own things and let the Chinese do what they want, and they let you do what you want.
As long as you're not infringing on each other, they're gonna look the other way. That's why they can work with Russia. Russia says, "Hey, you want Taiwan? Cool. We're not gonna object to anything that you're gonna do there, just don't object to the things that we're doing." And so China's like "Fine we're not gonna do that."
I have been wondering though at a certain point you would think that Xi Jinping won't want his name tied to tacit Russian support even of this war in Ukraine.
The war in Ukraine is still ongoing. Last week, Poland and Slovakia gave fighter jets to Ukraine. They came out and agreed to hand over MIG29's. That's a huge deal. They’re going to support the Ukrainian Air Force now. We've been talking about that since the first or second month of the war. And then the United States came out this week and said, “You know how we were gonna send those Abrams tanks in a year or two? All right, we're gonna try and get them to you much faster. We're gonna try and get them to Ukraine by the fall.”
Which also threw me for a loop because I thought we were gearing up for spring-summer offensive. Apparently spring-summer is not what we're worried about, but we're worried enough about the fall that we need to get those tanks to Ukraine by then, because by next year it'll be too late.
When you put all of those things together, I don't quite know what to make of it. China's diplomatic moves in the world are very interesting to me at the moment. I don't exactly know what they're gaming for, and that should also put us on edge.
Rob Larity: Do you think that China punches much below its weight in terms of soft power because they're so pragmatic? What do they stand for, do they have the ability to project that?
Jacob Shapiro: Soft power is a very interesting concept, created by a guy named Joseph Ny. It's a fairly dry paper, but it's a good one. He's the one that starts that idea of soft power and you can go from there. I actually wrote one of my favorite essays that I've ever written about the topic.
This was back in my g p F days. I can maybe find a link and we can put it in. The podcast description was about the relationship between propaganda and soft power.
The thesis of that piece was basically:
Authoritarian regimes can't really have soft power because they have propaganda. It's very heavy handed. So the Chinese Communist Party decides what image of China it wants its people to consume and wants people outside of China to consume. So internally, the Chinese Communist Party guarantees strength and is going to restore social harmony within the country and provide for prosperity and knockout corruption, things like that.
Externally, China's been trying to sell the Belt and Road initiative, or trying to sell China as this civilizational connective power that's gonna lead the next phase of globalization and things like that. But that's propaganda. Like they decided at the top levels of the Chinese Communist Party what the message was gonna be and it went down from there.
The reason a country like the United States has such immense soft power is because Washington's not telling Hollywood what movies to put out. The United States government is not telling you what kind of music you can consume or what it wants its artists to be projecting in terms of the world.
And that's why people like US art, that's why they like US movies or western art and Western movies in general. So I don't think China has a great deal of soft power because they don't allow those sorts of things to gestate and go out into the world.
In part I like watching Chinese movies cuz it tells me what they want me to think about. If you go watch shitty Chinese action movies, they're great because the adversary is always some white dude with a terrible American accent.
He's the nefarious actor that's causing problems all along the world. And the brave Chinese vigilante soldier fixes the problem. They’re a lot of fun. But I don't think most people are watching shitty Chinese action movies on airplanes like I am. Most people watch The Avengers.
Even right there, do you see where the soft power is? That's a very long-winded answer to your question, all to say that I don't think China has a lot of soft power right now. TikTok is a really interesting hybrid zone there, because TikTok isn't a source of soft power. It's not producing content, but it did produce this tool that allowed people to produce content in a certain way.
I guess you could say that maybe its origin conferred China some soft power, but apparently the United States is just gonna gang up on TikTok, while YouTube and Instagram and Facebook all steal that concept. I don't know how much soft power is really there either.
One of the reasons I love Blade Runner was because that world is a literal melting pot of global cultures. It creates a world where the Asian powers had risen at some point, and their language had gotten into our slang and their food was in the street. There’s no US government or dominant hegemony to rule the world from that perspective. It was much more literally multipolar. Maybe that's the world we get in 20 or 30 years.
Sitting here today, though, I don't think most people are consuming Chinese soft power assets. I think that's one of the Achilles heels for authoritarian regimes. Their societies do not produce content that is authentic to individuals.
It also is one of the reasons that authoritarian economies have such hard problems with innovation, because usually the things that lead to innovation and discovery are deeply personal at some scientist who get obsessed with something and makes a breakthrough and then pushes something forward because he had the space to make mistakes or to fail, or to challenge consensus or things like that.
Authoritarian regimes really have problems with that. The short answer to your question is no, I don't think China has a lot of soft power and they're gonna have to really change the way they operate if they wanna have soft power because they haven't demonstrated the ability to wield it at all.
Rob Larity: From my perspective as someone who consumes different sorts of things than you on the geopolitics side, I see that the US soft power has really grown, particularly around the internet and media.
Elon Musk, I think, obviously this is a very controversial figure, but I think we're gonna look back and this is gonna be a much bigger part of the conversation around his historical legacy. The crazy audacity, which of course veers into hubris and ridiculous all the time. The audacity to build, the audacity to do things that previously were thought impossible or unthinkable.
If you look at Tesla, you look at SpaceX, these have enormous soft power value. I think that represents the emergence of the internet economy, the emergence of tech in our lives every day, that I think is still underappreciated how inspiring that is to people of a certain bent all over the world.
.Like you can look here in France, not traditionally the most entrepreneurial place, and you can find people who are responding intellectually to that. Who are inspired to build things, to do things. That's a very powerful force and I think that's really accelerated in the last 10 years.
The other side to that comes from a piece by Xi Jingping that basically lays out the Chinese vision for the third world. If you want to summarize it, go for it.
Jacob Shapiro: His overall point was that US soft power is degrading a little bit because it’s gone from a bastion of freedom and innovation and expression and things like that to… whatever the United States is doing now? It’s become an us versus them situation. It's democracy or you're bad. The US is even turning its back on free trade. Our goal is no longer about driving down costs, our goal has turned into America First. Make America Great Again was Trump’s whole shtick, but Biden aims for the same thing, albeit slightly different language.
The US talks about freedom and liberalism and all these other things, but what are they actually doing? They're invading Iraq and trying to force feed them democracy. They're cutting off our economy. They're causing all these different problems all around the world.
Wouldn't it be nicer to just deal with a country that is pragmatic and supports you in whatever your goals are for your particular government? They’re coming in and saying, “We don't care what your government is like. You want democracy, you don't want democracy, none of our business. We want prosperity. We want people to have freedom.
We want to have respective sovereignty all around the world.” That's the point where it really breaks down for them, right?
They want respect for sovereignty, in part because they want the world to say Taiwan is a sovereign part of China. They’re pushing on other countries saying, “You want access to our economy, you want access to all the cool things that we do? You can't recognize Taiwan. That's the price for it.”
This week Honduras is throwing out its recognition of Taiwan to embrace relations with China, which really shows how far China has come with that battle. I think there are only 12 countries left that still recognize Taiwan as independent.
So, Xi Jinping is hanging out with Vlad in the gold doors and doing the reality show thing that I just talked about. That doesn't quite work because China recognizes Ukraine as a sovereign country. I'm really curious what Xi Jinping is gonna say to Zelensky when he speaks to him on the phone in the next week or two like he's talking about. They haven't talked since the war began, and China didn't just announce this visit with Putin this week.
Is China gonna try and become this centralized thing? They’re trying to play every side of the table and they want to steal the mantle that the US has been upholding for so long.
John Minnich pointed out to me odd similarities between the way China conceived of its role today and the way the United States conceived of its role in the 1890s to 1910s. We played that role in that version of the economy. We were the world's factory. We were sort of an inexhaustible land of labor and all these other things. China has supplanted us since then. And now you can see those nascent signs of them trying to express something abroad.
So that was China's message.
But even within that message, I think you can see the weaknesses of Chinese soft power, because that's not Xi expressing a grass view of China. I really do think that Xi and the Chinese Communist Party are trying to apply something from the top down. As the United States is learning and has learned in places like Iraq and Afghanistan, you can't really do it from the top down.
The entire foundation of US soft power is that it has nothing to do with our government. It has everything to do with a bottoms up approach, allowing individuals to express themselves in systems where they're relatively free.
Rob Larity: I agree with what you're saying, that it really shows the hollowness of China's soft power. I really like Stephen Kotkin, and he has this incredible description of the US-Soviet interaction in the later years of the Soviet Empire. In many ways, why did it fall? Why did the US win? We like to think that we have this soft power because of our values.
We're the city on the hill and freedom rings and all that crap. It's more philosophical ideas.Stephen points out that this might not really be the case.
The thing that caused Soviet elites to envy the US, that caused countries to cy for our influence was not necessarily all this highfalutin verbiage.
It was the fact that we were rich. They wanted our stuff, they wanted whiskey and cars and clothes and refrigerators and all the stuff that we had. As the sheer pragmatic physical gap between the amount of stuff that we had versus the Soviets widened from the 1950s to the 1980s, it began to really rub on them.
If you looked at the behavior of Soviet elites, they didn't have Soviet cars. They had European cars, they had American perfumes.
What I'm getting at is, while I agree that the notion of Chinese soft power in this sort of ideological sense, it also seems pretty hollow in that way. I do think that one of the major challenges that the US now faces to its own soft power is the fact that China's gotten rich without being free and having an authoritarian government.
If you're an authoritarian in a piss poor, shitty country and you're trying to figure out how to proceed, I think that's a very inspiring example that didn't exist before. And has never existed in history because no country has gotten as rich as China or as big as China without being a Western liberal political entity.
And that seems like a big thing. But what do you think about that idea?
Jacob Shapiro: Is that true? Is Japan a western political entity? Was South Korea a Western political entity when it had its growth miracle? It certainly had to imbibe aspects of it, but South Korean democracy is fairly young.
One of the genius of the United States after World War II was that we let Japan keep its regime. They imbibed some of the aspects of Western liberalism, but they also kept aspects that were distinctive of them. So I take your point though, China's model of development is very attractive.
In the same way that part of the reason the Cold War was between the Soviet Union in the United States was because the Soviet model of development in the 1950s was very attractive. If you looked at where the Soviet Union was versus the 1920s, the Soviet Union industrialized and modernized at an incredibly rapid pace.
Just a couple years after the US had nukes, the Soviets had nukes too. And to your point, they lost the competition over time because their economy couldn't really compete. A great example of this is the space race. Okay, they got there first, they had the top down priority. We had the top down priority too, and we put men on the moon and everything else.
But then look at all the different innovations that came out of the space program that continue to fundamentally affect our economy today. We didn't just stop with putting a man on the moon. American entrepreneurs did all these other different things, and I think that's the part that's missing. You mentioned Elon Musk. Gross.
But you're right. If you're Chinese, who are you looking to for inspiration? Are you looking to Jack Ma who's fled to Tokyo or whatever the reports say because he got his knees cut out from underneath him because he had the gall to challenge Xi Jinping. You don't have that kind of model or impetus to go forward.
I take your point that China's model can be a very compelling path forward if you’re still developing. There are aspects of the Chinese economy that I am jealous of.
I make this joke all the time. I hope if Chinese strategic thinkers are listening to this podcast please come build the Belt and Road Initiative in the state of Louisiana. Please modernize our ports and put in all the high speed rail and please connect New Orleans to especially Atlanta, Austin, and New York City.
It would be really nice to have high speed rail for my own personal life in those different cities.
The Chinese are wealthy and rich in ways and can emphasize things in ways that we can't. Another great example of this it's not just about hard infrastructure. Think about 5g. Huawei. The reason the United States went after Huawei as hard as it did was because Huawei was the best telecoms 5G company in the world.
They produced the best equipment for the cheapest price, and the only other players in the game were Nokia and Erickson. There wasn't really a US company. We still don't make a lot of the components and parts in the United States that you need to go into these things. So on that level, yes, China is at that stage of its development.
The interesting question is whether once you have prosperity, do you have to give freedom? Or will people consent to restriction once they've had a taste of what prosperity looks like?
Another noteworthy point is that, while China has gotten rich on a per capita basis and regional basis, not all of China has gotten rich.
So now China has to do this bait and switch where it has to convince the rest of the population that going from living on $1 a day to $5 a day was what the Chinese Communist party meant when it promised prosperity.
Rob Larity: I think that ends up being one of the biggest and most troubling questions around economics or development. To your point about Japan and Korea forging the path before China, lots of countries tried to emulate Japan in particular.
For example, when Turkey had its revolution and the Ottoman Empire fell in the early twentie, they very specifically were driven by the example of Japan. “Development without Westernization” was the mantra, but that's fairly limited because I think Japan is a much less liberal society than most people assume.
In many ways they're very good at keeping the US at arm's length, but making us think that they're totally in our pocket. I think they're fundamentally viewed as part of the US orbit, but that's not really true.
Back to China, this is a broad question but, how good are they really?
I always inevitably talk about the Chinese property bubble and China’s enormous problems. I think even though this sentiment toward China has become much more guarded, much more bearish from an economic standpoint, I still think people vastly underestimate the problems that they have.
The huge problems that they face over the next decade that are very similar to what the Soviet Union faced, just in terms of authoritarian regimes having massive inefficiency and wealth, destruction, and waste that gets hidden until it gets suddenly revealed.
Jacob Shapiro: Yeah.
I'll play devil's advocate a little there, but was the US really free and democratic when it got rich? I'm not sure if we can make that argument because women didn't have the vote in the United States until 1919. It's also the era of the robber barons and politicians that were picked in smoke-filled rooms behind the scenes, and it's whoever everybody wants to decide is the best for the given economic situation. That's not analogous to the democratic free environment that the United States exists in today.
I'd also point out that a lot of the US advances came during moments or crises or emergencies where the United States government did behave in an authoritarian manner. So think about the Civil War on the one hand, Abraham Lincoln suspended habeas corpus while they integrated the South back for a while there.
The United States, you could argue, was not a free country. Think also about the role of the US government and World Wars one and two. Part of the massive growth that we've had in the United States was because the US government basically took over the US economy for a couple years in the context of World War I.
The reason you get the roaring twenties and then the crash afterwards is because of the control that the US government exerted when they took over a ton of industries. That led to wild growth and then World War II did it again on steroids.
The US decides to amass all this energy. They fight two wars on two different continents. Something that really had never been done before. All sorts of things came out of that.
A modern example of this is what China has done with India. India, which really is a democracy. One of the problems with India is the government can't get anyone to do the things that it says. It's a billion plus people. It's free. It's got all these things that you would think, but they're talking about self-reliance. It's a big deal for India to even get the tax code harmonized in different regions from one place to the other.
It's a big deal for India to have water infrastructure in the entire country, let alone port infrastructure and high speed rail and all these special economic zones that China's been able to build. So the rejoinder to your question might be you need a little bit of authoritarianism and the greater good sort of thinking anytime you're gonna get an economic growth miracle. The United States had its moments there too.
The United States also was willing to give power back to the people though, after a particular time period. China's not really showing that, at least not right now.
Rob Larity: I'm gonna push back on that a little bit because I don't think the 19th century example is comparable. If you look at the size of the US government or any government at that time, you simply didn't have the same kind of state capacity to control things that we do now.
For example, the US federal government was tiny until the 1930s and after the Great Depression where they had to expand enormously in a very short amount of time. I don't think that's apples to apples.
Jacob Shapiro: Lets bring it back to China, this is part of China's point. China says, no, this wasn't a different historical time. This was just a hundred or 200 years ago, and you did all these terrible things in your society, and now you're lecturing us about what we wanna do.
I'm not saying I approve or disapprove of that. I'm just saying when you think about the Chinese Communist Party's argument back to the United States, part of it is like, who are you to talk to us? 150 years ago you had slaves who were building your economy.
Rob Larity: Yeah. And of course you can make the "what about." What about slavery? What about this, what about that? It's very common. But I think it's hard to argue that there's not a fundamental difference between the Soviet Union China today in terms of the way the US commandeered the industrial economy during WW2. Of course that's a very special example, China's like that on steroids and without stopping for very long periods of time. So it's fundamentally different, I think, in terms of liberalism versus authoritarianism.
This is something we talk about a lot in terms of innovation. In terms of innovation, the state is essential. If you look at World War II, it laid out the bones for so much of our modern technology.
How does the state create the necessary pre-conditions for early stage technology development that the private sector just won't or cannot have the patience for or the motivations for, because it's not profitable on any reasonable time horizon?
So in that sense governments are like the Incredible Hulk. The Incredible Hulk is great when he can turn into the Hulk and kick some ass, but then he turns back into Bruce Banner and he’s a normal scientist. You just can't have the incredible Hulk that gets stuck in Hulk mode because then that becomes unhealthy.
So China is stuck in Incredible Hulk mode.
Jacob Shapiro: Okay. The United States and Soviet Union are qualitatively different. I think the only thing I would push back against you there is that China's future is not written yet. China's still at the introductory phases of what it's gonna do with the position that it's assumed right now.
We can make a moral equivalency argument about the United States and the Soviet Union because the United States had some illiberal beginnings or terrible things in its history.
We have our original sins. They're all there. We don't dismiss them. But look at what the United States became. Look at how it's grown. It grew and evolved and banished some aspects of itself and tried to change for the better. We can talk about how imperfect or incomplete it is, but like actually tried.
Whereas the Soviet Union never tried it, never admitted it was wrong about anything and then it came crashing down and the whole edifice collapsed. And we're still dealing with that today in the Russia-Ukraine War.
This sort of brings us full circle in this conversation, but in the 1980’s people thought Japan was gonna have soft power. People thought everybody was gonna emulate Japan, and then the Japanese model crashed in on itself. One of the reasons that the old Blade Runner doesn't make sense today and why they had to update it was because Japan went away. It didn't actually happen. It's hard to imagine the streets of LA with Japanese signs on them because Japan didn't take over the world.
I think the question is - what does China do from here? Can you imagine a world 30 years from now where China is different? Where Xi Jinping was the emperor who seized control of the state in order to redistribute wealth of the interior? And then once he was done with his task, he decided to give power back to the people and left? China just goes back to party consensus about who's gonna be chosen rulers and will even empower the peoples in the regions a little bit, because they’re not afraid of these different regions being corrupt or trying to challenge the center or things like that.
That's a very optimistic, naive prediction. I wouldn't even say that it’s a prediction. I'm just saying it's a possibility. We will speak about China differently if that is the sort of trajectory that China takes over the next 30 years versus if it takes the Japanese trajectory where the economy just collapses in on itself and it has lost decades. It could also hit a worst case scenario, which you're describing, which is the Soviet Union one, it can't get out of Hulk mode.
It has to repress and crack down more and more, even as its need for innovation and economic growth increases, and eventually those things will come to a head. One of the reasons China is so interesting is because it's where the future is being written right now. It's the one of the countries with a future ahead of it. We also think of Chinese civilization as being thousands of years old and all these other things, but the People's Republic of China is not that old. There are not many countries in the world that are younger than the United States. The United States formed in 1776 and its current form is even younger than that.
This iteration of China is one of the youngest countries in the world, and yet is as powerful and as rich as it is. China is authoritarian now, but now always gonna be authoritarian in its future. Maybe it will chart some different course, but maybe it also won't.
Rob Larity: That's another thing. But that's another thing I wonder about a lot cuz I've been reading a lot about medieval Europe in the last few weeks. Like France during the Mayor of Indian and Carolinian periods. During certain extended periods of time you would have power centralized and authority fall within one or two major figures and then it would inevitably dissipate and authority would weaken in large part because you couldn't physically couldn't project power over long distances. You couldn't keep track of what was going on. You couldn't communicate fast enough.
And another historical analog that I find interesting is The Ottoman Empire. They experienced much of the same thing, where the Ottoman Empire was actually super centralized in the 1500’s, but they became increasingly less centralized in contrast to all the European states because they just couldn't control all these local autocrats and power centers.
Then in the 1900’s when the telegraph was invented,, the Ottoman Sultan was the most enthusiastic adopter of the telegraph because he saw it as a tool to finally crack down and put people in all these little local areas who could keep tabs and literally just communicate faster.
What I'm getting at is that China today is still a very decentralized place and we overstate how centralized power truly is. The hills are still high and the emperor is far away. That's still very much the case. But it's also changed at the margin, much more toward centralization.
If you look at what they've done with the apparatus of state monitoring of propaganda, like that's a technological development, like the great firewall, the hundreds of thousands of people who work monitoring Chinese citizens and keeping tabs on what they're saying.
Once they’ve gone down this path, it's very difficult for Xi to turn and say, “Okay, now we're gonna liberalize.” Is he going to fire 200,000 monitors? They built these bureaucratic apparati, these bureaucratic tools, these technology tools, and then they’re just going to give them up? Does that make sense?
Jacob Shapiro: It does and that's where his Marxism probably comes into defining his worldview. But that's probably a whole other podcast. Cause if we're gonna explain how Marxism with Leninism, with Chinese characteristics is gonna predict what they think is gonna unfold with their society, it's gonna take us some time.
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