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Monthly Archives

Entries from March 1, 2009 - March 31, 2009

2:02AM

Say goodbye to China's Tuckers

MARKETPLACE: "China's Auto Industry to Consolidate," by Norihiko Shirouzu, Wall Street Journal, 5 February 2009.

China's auto industry has been living the dream of early-20th century American automakers--as in, the more, the merrier (and innovative).

But the downturn will likely accelerate an inevitable concentration, meaning several GMs will be consolidated, yielding national brands better positioned to battle mature foreign competition both in China and across globalization's rising middle class.

3:08AM

Column 145

China's naval shenanigans

Those aggressive and immature Chinese are at it again: sending their spy ships to harass our spy ship as it conducts submarine-related surveillance in international waters off their coast. Our new director of national intelligence warns that this is the "most serious" military pushback we've encountered since 2001, when the Chinese forced down one of our spy planes right off their coast.

Sense a pattern? I'm not a China expert, but it strikes me that Beijing manufactures a new spy crisis every time we field a new president -- like clockwork.

Read on at KnoxNews.
Read on at Scripps Howard.

Tom notes:

Title: China naval shenanigans

should be either China's or Chinese

bad grammar

Later on somebody changed

the Second World War

to

the World War II

Also bad grammar.

2:08PM

Tom at the Carnegie Council

Streaming audio now available. (Don't see a place to download.)

Word is, this episode has already appeared in the Carnegie Council's podcast feed over at iTunes if you prefer to take in your audio that way.

As I listen, I think this is my favorite current Brief. Be sure to give it a listen.

We had a couple of total ringers in the Q&A. One pointed to Norman Angell. Let's have some of the people who were there fess up. Stuart? Jarrod?

3:01AM

The Economist overview on AFPAK

EDITORIAL: "Fighting the Taliban: A strategy for avoiding defeat; America needs to show more patience--and more delicacy--on both sides of the Afghan-Pakistan border," The Economist, 21 February 2009.

BRIEFING: "Pakistan: The in the face of chaos; How Pakistan's army is failing, and what America must do, to crack down on rampant Islamist insurgencies in the region," The Economist, 21 February 2009.

BRIEFING: "Afghanistan and Pakistan: Boots on the ground; America is sending more troops and helping build a bigger Afghan army, but will still struggle to defear the Taliban," The Economist, 21 February 2009.

Good overview in aggregate, especially the acknowledgment that the definition of victory "gets more modest by the month" (first piece).

Hope expressed--counter-intuitively--that the return of civilian rule in Pakistan bodes better for resisting radical Islam--an historical observation. Hmmmm, I say, remembering Benazir's (the murdered missus of the new PM) great accomplishments in this regard.

Pakistan will continue to view the Taliban as part of its "strategic depth" argument vis-โˆšโ€ -vis India, so much so that, in the end, I think America will have to decide to make India happier than Pakistan if we really want a stable outcome.

Why?

Consider this:

Foreign diplomats in Islamabad sound increasingly despondent. One says: "The more effort we've put into this place, the worse it's got." The rate at which Mr Musharraf's few achievements have crumbled to dust is shocking.

The most depressing outcome has been the demise of dโˆšยฉtente with India--thus my sense that we'll need to choose more in the future between the two: a real state on the rise and a fake one on the decline.

The end note struck here seems implausible: convincing the Pakistani government of NATO's long-term commitment of 15-to-20 years. I think that's a pipe dream: just too little strategic interest in a place way too far away.

Tell me a story about the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation's long-term commitment and it would seem far less fanciful.

But imagine the "regionalization" required for that.

The upside, as the third article points out: there is no superpower backing the Taliban. Indeed, every great power remains their firm enemy, with only "ally" Pakistan really standing in the way.

2:29AM

China's untapped domestic market is more rural than urban

WORLD NEWS: "China Seeks a New Market in Its Own Backyard: As Western Export Markets Languish, Beijing Encourages Consumption by Rural Residents to Help Revive Economic Growth," by Mei Fong and Jason Leow, Wall Street Journal, 10 February 2009.

The emerging purchasing power of households in China, comparing 1990 to 2007: 5 color TVs per 100 households in 1990, but 95 in 2007; mobile phones go from zero to 78; washing machines, from 10 to 46; refrigerators, from 1 to 26, and computers from 0 to 4.

So big surprise that the downturn in the West convinces a Lenovo to concentrate on the home market: it's got 96% of households left to sell PCs.

So Beijing realizes Japan's continuing mistake in not developing its domestic demand sufficiently, and plans to rely more on the Chinese village than the American consumer: 150k new stores planned this year for the countryside population of 700 million.

Last year China's domestic consumption accounted for about 4/10ths of GDP, compared with about 7/10ths in the U.S. The problem of tapping the rural population is that the annual income of about $700 per person is typically hoarded for sick times and old age, reflecting the lack of medical and pension plans. Yes, China can subsidize such purchases, but you'd have to wonder if the money couldn't be better spent.

2:27AM

Chinese jump

ARTICLE: Chinese utility tries to join electricity pioneers, By JOE McDONALD, AP, Feb 21, 2009

Good example of what we're always talking about: taking advantage to jump the technology ladder.

(Thanks: Louis Heberlein)

4:16AM

Tom latest article for Good

I wrote this last fall for Good magazine, which published it in the Jan/Feb 09 issue (out in Dec 08) but hasn't put it up on its site like my other pieces for them, so I post here to maintain my record of keeping all my magazine articles available online.

Good, Jan/Feb 09, pp. 90-91.

The Rise of the Global Middle Class: America has had the biggest demand in the global economy for so long that we can't remember what it was like when that wasn't the case. But that's all about to change. by THOMAS P.M. BARNETT [Thomas P.M. Barnett is a policy and foreign-affairs expert and a contributing editor at Esquire. His new book, Great Powers: America and the World After Bush, is forthcoming. He wrote about Obama's and McCain's foreign-policy in GOOD 013].

I'll let you in on a little secret about globalization: It is demand that determines power, not supply.

Consumption is king; everybody else serves at will. So it ain't about who's got the biggest military complex but who's got the biggest middle class. Everybody's got the dream. What matters is who can pay for it.

For as long as we can remember, that's been America--the consumer around which the entire global economy revolved. What's it like to be the global demand center? The world revolves around your needs, your desires, and your ambitions. Your favorite stories become the world's most popular entertainment. Your fears become the dominant political issues. You are the E.F. Hutton of consumption: When you talk, everybody listens. That was the role the Boomers played for decades in America and--by extension--around the world through their unprecedented purchasing power. But that dominance is nearing an end.

In coming decades, it won't belong to Americans, but to Asians. So say hello to your new master, corporate America: Mr. and Mrs. M.C. Chindia.

The rise of the Asia middle class, a binary system centered in China and India, alters the very gravity of the global economy. The vast sucking sound you hear is not American jobs going overseas, but damn near every natural resource being drawn into Asia's yawning maw. Achieving middle-class status means shifting from needs to wants, so Asia's rise means that Asia's wants will determine our planet's future--perhaps its very survival. And as any environmentalist with a calculator knows, it isn't possible for China and India to replicate the West's consumption model, so however this plays out, the world must learn to live with their translation of the American dream.

As for the new middle class's relative size, think bread truck, not breadbasket. Over the next couple of decades, the percent of the world's population that can be considered middle class, judging by purchasing power, will almost double, from just over a quarter of the population to more like half. The bulk of this increase will occur in China and India, where the percentage shifts will be similar. So if we round off China and India today as having 2.5 billion people, then their middle class will jump in numerical size from being roughly equivalent to the population of North America or the European Union to being their combined total.

No, it won't be your father's middle class--not at first. Much of that Asian wave now crests at a household income level that most Americans would associate with the working poor, but it will grow into solid middle-class status over the coming years through urbanization and job migration from manufacturing to services. And for global companies that thrive on selling to the middle class, this is already where all the sales growth is occurring, and it's only going to get bigger. As far as global business is concerned, there is no sweeter spot than an emerging demand center, because we're talking about an entire generation in need of branding--more than 500 million teenagers looking to forge consumer identities.

There are also essentially two unknowable wild cards associated with the rise of China's and India's middle classes. First, how can they achieve an acceptable standard of living without replicating the West's resource-wasteful version? And second, what would happen if that middle-class lifestyle was suddenly threatened or even reversed? The planet must have an answer to the first question, even as it hopes to avoid ever addressing the second. Here's where those two fears may converge. As their income rises, their diets change. Not just taking in more food, but far more resource-intensive food, like dairy and meat. Right now, China imports vast amounts of food and India is just barely self-sufficient in the all-important grains category. Both are likely to suffer losses in agricultural production in coming years and decades, thanks to global warming, just as internal demand balloons with that middle class. Meanwhile, roughly one-third of the world's advanced-lifestyle afflictions--like diabetes or cancer--will be found in China and India by 2030. Toss in the fact that much of the population lives along the low-lying coasts, and our notional middle-class couple could eventually cast the deciding global votes on the issue of whether or not global warming is worth addressing aggressively.

Whoever captures the middle-class flag in coming years will have to possess the soft power necessary to shape globalization's soul in this century, because humanity's very survival depends on our generation's ability to channel today's rising social anger into a lengthy period of social reform. This era's global capitalism must first be shamed (populism) and then tamed (progressivism), just as America's rapacious version was more than a century ago. Today's global financial crisis simply marks the opening bell in a worldwide fight that is destined to go many rounds.

3:55AM

That emerging middle class keeps growing in its demand and ambition

MARKETPLACE: "Rural India Snaps Up Mobile Phones: As Other Sectors of the Economy Are Jolted, Demand Among Poor Farmers Keeping an Industry Growing," by Eric Bellman, Wall Street Journal, 9 February 2009.

Urban cell-phone penetration in India is stunningly high at more than 75%, but in the rural areas it's more like 12%.

And yet it is growing by leaps and bounds, demonstrating the near-unlimited demand for connectivity in the least connected areas.

Description:

The demand for cellphones is coming mainly from rural consumers, who typically earn less than $1,000 a year. These buyers haven't been affected by plunging stock and real-estate prices or tighter bank lending since they typically don't own land and don't borrow. A large majority of them don't have access to regular landline phone networks--there are only about 40 million landline subscribers in India--so once cellular coverage comes to their towns or villages they scramble to get their first phones.

In short, rural poor will buy it before a toilet for their house. That's how much they value the connectivity.

Why? The business info flow is huge, not to mention the great gains in time efficiency when you're not waiting alongside a road for hours for the delivery or pickup truck to appear.

Plus, as one farmer says, "I bring it with me to the fields and anyone can reach me here."

Feed the middle, meet their demand, and everything else will follow.

3:49AM

Why criminalize a fraction of drug use?

LEADERS: How to stop the drug wars, The Economist, Mar 5th 2009

I personally see a future of very high drug use as we continue to age demographically and seek even longer lives. Spending so much money and prison-time and violence over this fraction of drug use in our system seems myopic and truly counter-productive. The price for Mexico is unreal: it's main sin is its location next-door to a drug-happy culture.

(Thanks: Erwin van der Rijnst)

3:48AM

Only in America (Freeman's withdrawal)

ARTICLE: Intelligence Pick Blames 'Israel Lobby' For Withdrawal, By Walter Pincus, Washington Post, March 12, 2009; Page A01

Only in America can a guy charged with espionage against his country be celebrated for publicly derailing an administration nomination that disfavors the foreign government on whose behalf he is accused of conducting said espionage.

Imagine that happening with any other country (like, say, China) and there would be congressional investigations galore.

Little wonder how many argue that America's strategic interests are being compromised.
.
Remember that the next time you're being sold on war with Iran.

3:46AM

Backlash against the 'red' rich

ARTICLE: Tycoons tumble as ailing China turns against capitalism, By Michael Sheridan, (London) Times Online, March 1, 2009

The "red" rich were long overdue for a populist backlash, and the downturn will pump it up considerably.

China's only choice for really moving ahead is to process the populist anger with progressive reforms, which here means more transparency and less clear mixing of politics and business to party members' advantage. We're looking at Boss Tweed-like exposes for quite some time.

Will be interesting to see how the Party responds.

(Thanks: Steve Epstein)

3:43AM

China in Afghanistan

ARTICLE: China's thirst for copper could hold key to Afghanistan's future, By Jonathan S. Landay, McClatchy Newspapers, March 8, 2009

This is a fascinating bit to watch: U.S. troops indirectly guarding Chinese development of raw material source (copper) in Afghanistan.

This is the sort of synergistic reality I've long been talking about: "Pollyanna" to the old school "realist" academics who don't know their asses from their elbows on global economics, but more and more what we're going to encounter in these interventions--clear strategic overlap that's there to be exploited.

Keep an eye on this one.

(Thanks: David M Damast)

2:59AM

Hispanics outpace African-Americans as federal prisoners

NATIONAL: "Hispanics Are Largest Ethnic Group in Federal Prisons, Study Shows," by Solomon Moore, New York Times, 19 February 2009.

Annual number of federal offenders doubles from 1991-2007. Thank you War on Drugs.

But the Latino numbers quadruple, with the vast bulk being immigration sentences, followed by drug sentences. Of the Latinos in our fed prisons, 72% are not citizens--nice. Most are sent there by the four border states (CA, AZ, NM and TX). Cross the border illegally and--thanks to our zero tolerance--we toss you in jail. The average sentence for Latinos is 46 months.

This is a good use of our taxpayer money all right.

2:57AM

The five principles of Cold War nukes still hold today

BOOKS AND ARTS: "Living with the bomb: Patience and virtue; Better Safe Than Sorry, by Michael Krepon, The Economist, 14 February 2009.

The five principles that translate just fine:

deterrence

conventional military strength

containment

diplomatic engagement

a readiness to engage in arms control.

Krepon doesn't believe in going to zero, and neither do I. These five principles got us through a Cold War, killing great-power war in the process.

No reason to believe we can't do the same with today's batch of "irrational" regimes, to include policing the possibility of transfer to proxy non-state actors (something we mastered in the Cold War too, did we not?).

Ah, but I forget. Iran is a crazy state full of crazy people and leaders who want only to kill themselves. That's why Iran's been around for about five centuries but is intent on disappearing next week.

Of course, since that can be arranged, I also don't see that as a problem.

2:51AM

Old India v. New India

INTERNATIONAL: "Attack on Women at an Indian Bar Intensifies a Clash of Cultures," by Somini Sengupta, New York Times, 9 February 2009.

Conservative groups are attacking women found drinking in college-town bars, with one celebrated case naturally spawning a stunning video of a Valentine's Day scuffle (the conservatives believe Valentine's Day to be a foreign plot to pollute their culture--cut to Mr. Hallmark blubbering, "What? I'm just trying to sell some cards here!").

The conservatives are attacked by the ruling Congress party (fingering the out-of-power BJP for supporting some radical Hindu groups) as being the equivalent of a Talibanization wave.

One young guy explains it as such:

I'm wearing a jacket, not a dhoti-kurta because I like wearing a jacket. It's globalization.

His girlfriend, a victim of such attacks, chimes in:

We are globalized in our lifestyle but very Indian at heart. I know I am.

Every Bollywood musical I've ever watched has basically the same plot: traditional father battles modern man for the obedience/heart of the upstart daughter. Seven songs, two fights and a kiss later, modern guy wins and dad typically relents.

But in the real world, dad typically resents.

2:01AM

Seriously, send in the Magnificent Seven

INTERNATIONAL: "Faradje Journal: Armed With Little but Resolve, And Defending a Hollowed Village," by Jeffrey Gettleman, New York Times, 19 February 2009.

Some more details on how pathetic it is for farmers and their sons to fight off the Lord's Resistance Army gunman, armed only with machetes, slingshots, axes and the like in the northeast corner of Congo.

The people feel totally abandoned by the Congo military. Left on their own, they do their best to defend their villages against the mass-raping, plundering, and child-stealing LRA, who are stoned most of the time.

4:23AM

Economist's interview with Tom

Podcast is up.

Listen to streaming:


Or download.

Tom's comment:

Having Wooldridge (unidentified in that Economist way) describe Great Powers as a "fascinating book" is the best review I could imagine. Really makes me feel like I connected intellectually with my target audience--i.e., serious long-term thinkers about "globalisation."

4:01AM

Tom's going to be on the radio today

10:00 Central Time, KROC AM, Rochester, MN. Listen live on the web.

3:44AM

Selling ice boxes to eskimos

ARTICLE: A security strategy we can afford, By Bernard I. Finel, Armed Forces Journal, March 2009

Interesting sales job: presents the usual across-the-board cuts bit up front, then three straw men to be dismissed, and then pleads for smarter use of allies (how about Japan, Taiwan, and Korea!) to do things like "projecting power in East Asia" (code for taking on China--there's a new one!).

So . . . if we're nicer to all our old allies, and do the usual called-upon magic (defense reform), we can keep the balanced force and still manage the entire world!

Got that? Sprinkle defense reform over ourselves and our old allies, and that's the package we need to go forward with this world--basically the old package played smarter.

Ironic punchline, given the start, dontcha think?

Still, slick delivery.

(Thanks: Patrick Squire)

3:41AM

Cooperating with Russia on nukes

POST: Enlightened Self-Interest, by Douglas Barrie, Ares, 3/9/2009

Realistic analysis: nukes are expensive and a full-up triad is super-expensive, especially since it accomplishes basically nothing for Russia.

Like the linkages suggested also: no need to weaponize space.