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Demographics Part 5: The Chinese Collapse [Peter Zeihan, Zeihan on Geopolitics]

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  • Chinese demographic data released earlier this week is extremely concerning: Birth rate is at 1.16, the lowest in their history and the second lowest in human history, and the biggest cities have birth rates below 0.7.
  • The population peaked last year, dropping by 800,000 people.
  • The Chinese government has admitted to overcounting the population by 100 million people over the past 40 years due to the one-child policy.
  • China is now the fastest aging society in human history due to a lack of people under 40.
  • China is highly dependent on global trade and imports for oil, food, and raw materials – making them vulnerable to disruptions in the global economy.
  • If current trends continue, the Chinese demography will dissolve in the next 8-10 years, and there is no economic theory for how an economy might function in this situation.

You can watch the full Demographics Part 5: The Chinese Collapse on YouTube – Published January 18, 2023

Sweden’s (Not So) Rare Earth Metals [Peter Zeihan, Zeihan on Geopolitics]

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  • Swedish mining company has found a million metric tons of rare earth oxides
  • Rare earth metals are used in many technological applications
  • China currently dominates the rare earths market with around 90% of total supply
  • Swedish find is not as significant as initially thought due to large quantity needed to extract small amounts of rare earths .
  • Processing technologies are not new and have been used since the 1920s
  • Processing is toxic and time consuming
  • Chinese dominance is due to subsidizing of industry
  • Other countries have stockpiled and built processing capacity in case of Chinese cut off

You can watch the full Sweden’s (Not So) Rare Earth Metals on YouTube – Published January 16, 2023

Repost: I will never get to go to Hong Kong [Noah Smith, Noahpinion]

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  • Noah Smith recounts his experience visiting Hong Kong during the height of the protests in October 2019.
  • He and his friend, BB, attended a peaceful protest in a small urban park and witnessed a tense standoff between protesters and police.
  • The next day, they found themselves in Salisbury Garden, surrounded by thousands of protesters, and witnessed a fight between protesters and police.
  • They then moved to Nathan Road, where they heard the protest song “Glory to Hong Kong” for the first time.
  • Noah realized that the protesters were fighting for national self-determination, but that Hong Kong would make a tiny country and had no chance for independence.
  • He observed the steady Chinese pressure that had led to a loss of economic opportunity and sky-high rents, fueling the anger of the protesters.
  • He and BB experienced tear gas and witnessed protesters beating a man they said was a “Chinese spy.”
  • They eventually escaped the protest zone and returned to their hotel.
  • Noah ends the story with a warning to China that the culture of Hong Kong lives on in the minds of a generation of Hong Kongers, and the more they integrate Hong Kong into China, the more pieces of that culture will have a chance to spread.

Click HERE for original. Published December 26, 2022

Twitter’s Link Ban [Ben Thompson, Stratechery]

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• Twitter’s link ban to other social networks was met with widespread condemnation, including from prominent members of the tech industry.

• Network portability is the single most important thing to spurring competition, but government regulation is going in the opposite direction.

• China is ramping up production of decade-old chip technology, setting off alarm bells in the US and prompting some lawmakers to try to stop them.

• The US has a massive strategic weakness when it comes to trailing edge chips, and the CHIPS Act should have been focused on building trailing edge capacity.

Published December 19, 2022

Visit Stratechery to read Ben Thompson’s original post

An Interview with Gregory C. Allen About the Past, Present, and Future of the China Chip Ban [Ben Thompson, Stratechery]

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• Gregory Allen is the director of the AI Governance Project and senior fellow in the Strategic Technologies Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
• CSIS is a research institution and think tank that provides analysis of public policy issues and works to improve the quality of the public policy debate.
• The defense industry and the commercial technology industry have undergone a multi-decade divorce, with the majority of defense spending now going towards specialists whose primary customer is the U.S. national security community.
• There are disadvantages to this structure, as the defense bureaucracy is not well-suited to developing disruptive technologies that could potentially put the U.S. at a strategic disadvantage.
• The early success of Silicon Valley was largely due to government funding, but the visionaries of the time recognized that the story would end in mass commercial adoption.
• The globalization of semiconductors was a conscious policy decision made by the U.S. to strengthen Japan’s economy and technology industry, and it was largely successful.
• We are now at an inflection point where the current policy towards China is out of gas, and a new policy must be developed.
• The U.S. and China have had a long and complicated relationship, with the U.S. attempting to integrate China into the global economy in the 1990s.
• The U.S. and China have had a strained national security relationship since the Taiwan Strait Crisis in 1997.
• The U.S. Chamber of Commerce began to express concern over China’s Made in China 2025 policy, which sought to replace Western joint venture partners in China.
• This lack of guardrails on the relationship between the U.S. and China has led to a breakdown in diplomatic relations and an increase in tensions.
• The path from the 2015 Made in China 2025 response to the 2022 chip ban announcement was marked by a shift in U.S.-China trade policy, a realization of Chinese technological sophistication, and a hostile Chinese national security posture.
• Donald Trump’s election and his focus on tariffs further shifted the Overton window, and the U.S. government’s punishment of ZTE for violating Iran sanctions revealed the power of export controls as a strategic tool.
• This led to a shift in Chinese national security policy, with a focus on self-reliance in the semiconductor industry and an understanding that their tech giants were vulnerable to U.S. sanctions.
• China has been pushing for self-sufficiency in semiconductor technology for some time, but the ZTE incident in 2018 caused a step change in the conversation.
• The U.S. has implemented export controls to limit China’s access to cutting-edge semiconductor technology, but this is a risky move as it could lead to the U.S. being isolated from the global semiconductor industry.
• The U.S. is relying on its allies to back its export controls, and China is hoping that the Netherlands and Japan will be persuaded to betray the U.S. and provide China with the technology it needs.
• Germany is the most challenging ally to get on board, as it has the most sophisticated semiconductor technology and could provide China with the essential components it needs.
• The Biden administration’s October 2020 export control policy is a major reversal of 25 years of U.S. government policy on trade in technology towards China.
• The policy is designed to restrict the sale of advanced AI chips and semiconductor manufacturing equipment to China, and to degrade the status quo of technology in China.
• The policy is a response to China’s civil-military fusion and is designed to prevent the Chinese military from accessing advanced AI technology.
• Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has described the policy as being at an “inflection point” in the post-Cold War world, and the policy could potentially lead to a new Cold War between the U.S. and China.
• The US government has recently implemented a ban on the export of semiconductor chips to China, in an effort to prevent the Chinese military from gaining access to advanced technology.
• The ban is enforced by the Department of Commerce, which uses lists of prohibited entities and technologies to identify and prevent illegal exports.
• The ban is designed to prevent China from accessing the latest technology, but it also creates incentives for China to attempt to evade the export controls.
• The consolidation of the semiconductor industry has made it easier to enforce the ban, as there are fewer companies to monitor and fewer technologies to track.

Published December 15, 2022. Visit Stratechery to read Ben Thompson’s original post

COVID: China’s Problem Child [Peter Zeihan, Zeihan on Geopolitics]

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  • There is a situation brewing in China resulting from the late November/early December protests, leading to a fast-spreading outbreak that is difficult to measure.
  • The Chinese have discontinued their use of social monitoring for Covid and have allowed provinces and local governments to lessen restrictions for the first time.
  • The scale of the situation is difficult to comprehend, with the Chinese population being older, more diabetic, and lacking natural immunity.
  • Vaccines are barely functional against the current strain, and the Chinese have limited access to critical care.
  • If the current strain is worse than measles, a death rate of 100 per 100,000 infections is likely to be much higher.
  • The Chinese Health System is inadequate to face this crisis, and many businesses and testing facilities are already closed.
  • It is likely that China will be offline from a manufacturing point of view for at least the next three to four months.

link to original vlog published December 14, 2022: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d0BNUF9ItmQ


Japan’s New Toy: The Tomahawk Missile [Peter Zeihan, Zeihan on Geopolitics]

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  • The Japanese Defense Ministry has announced that the US has agreed to sell Japan several hundred Tomahawk cruise missiles.
  • This is a big deal as Japan has the world’s second largest Blue Water Navy and would do well in a fight against the Chinese Navy.
  • Japan is part of the first island chain which separates the Chinese littoral from the rest of the world, making it vulnerable to Chinese weapon systems.
  • Tomahawks have a range of 1,000 miles with a 1,000 pound warhead and are difficult to detect or intercept.
  • The US has rarely sold this type of weapon to anyone other than itself and the UK, making it a major strategic development as Japan and Australia now have the capability of independently destroying China’s economic links to the world.

link to original vlog published December 13, 2022: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jK54VH_IE5s


Chips and China [Ben Thompson, Stratechery]

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  • Intel’s integrated model of designing and manufacturing its own chips enabled it to have high margins, but it was disrupted by the rise of modular chip companies like TSMC.
  • TSMC created a new market for chip designers by enabling them to start their own companies without needing to build their own fabs.
  • ASML’s 300-nanometer process and extreme ultraviolet lithography machines enabled TSMC and Samsung to increase their output and margins, and eventually forced Intel to become a customer.
  • ASML’s EUV machines are made of over 100,000 parts, cost approximately $120 million, and require over 800 suppliers, including Zeiss and TRUMPF.
  • In 2012, TSMC, Intel, and Samsung all invested in ASML to help the company finish the EUV project.
  • TSMC had three reasons to commit to EUV: a multi-decade relationship with ASML, the need to manufacture smaller lots of greater variety, and Apple’s willingness to pay for the fastest chips.
  • China has the challenge of re-creating the foundry supply chain from the ground up, but has three advantages: it is easier to follow a path than to forge a new one, it has benefited from technological sharing, and it has unlimited money and motivation.
  • China is also building up its trailing edge fabs, which are still using U.S. equipment, and is likely to become the largest supplier of these chips.
  • The Biden administration’s sanctions are designed to not touch this part of the industry, but this creates a new liability for the U.S. and more danger for Taiwan.
  • In the long run, the U.S. may have given up a permanent economic advantage, and in the short run, the chip ban has raised the risk of conflict between the U.S. and China.

Click HERE for original. Published October 25, 2022

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