Bloomberg Businessweek with goofy title (Really? The new silk road doesn't lead to the U.S.? Wow! I would have expected otherwise, given our geographic position on the planet.)
All this piece confirms is that the economic integration and development of the Gap will be done primarily by the New Core--not the Old. That's something I've argued for many years now. It just makes sense: the last in, the next integration begin. Think of it as a staircase: the higher up you are in the production chain, the less sense it makes for you to be the primary agent of slotting in those who come immediately behind you.
So Europe slotted in North America way back when, then we did the same to Asia and the ABCs of Latin America, and now they do the same to the Gap.
As one expert is quoted in the piece, "We saw the same phenomenon with American and European companies 100 years ago."
Yes, this all means more competition for markets and resources for companies across the Core, but the best of the Old Core's companies will clean up nicely--like a Caterpillar.
A good byproduct: as the New Core-Gap trade explodes, more of it will be done in currencies other than dollars and euros, and that's a good disciplining pressure on the Old Core--especially the US.