[QUOTE] Originally posted by GePap
Yes, thats my point. We're dealing with a limited history here. And the two thousand years of Chinese pre-industrial history is not illuminating.
China has already disrupted the global market. If opne believes in capitalism and globalization,
im not sure I do, not as much as you do.
Im not sure what you mean by building enough of an internal market to boom. All the historic booms of the last 40 years have been export driven. Internal markets develop slowly - fast booms are the result of taking advantage of wage differentials in the international market - you can keep growing beyond that, of course, but no reason to expect a "boom"
I predict nothing. I only point out we dont KNOW how the global commodity market will behave in these circumstances.
Size affects organization and implementation, but there is no theoretical reason why 200 Million and 1 billion should make a difference in having a dmeocracy, specially as communications tehcnology becomes more powerful.
Im not (at this point) making a theoretical argument. Im only pointing out that prior precedent, as precedent, is not probative.
[q]besides, there was no real transition between "UK to US"- the UK was the ex- strongest power in a multipolar system, and by 1905 it was clear the strongest European power was Germany, with Russia's accendence unclear. The two world wars were sorting out the multi-polar system in flux. Today we don't have a real multipolar system.
I was, at this point, focusing on the transition from GDP number one from UK to US. Im quite aware that transitioned through a multipolar world. I would expect that China will emerge as GDP number one in a multipolar world as well.
4. What is the demographic future? Prior transitions, at least those based on new adopters of the capitalist model (thus excluding the different case of the rise of Spain), involved shifts from countries with intrinsically small resource bases to ones with larger resource bases. Venice to Netherlands, Netherlands to UK (and France) and UK to US. The US has a larger resource base than China (or India)- China has a larger population at this time due to accidents of history. Will the transition be different because of this?
Russia has more resources than the US, but you don;t see them going anywhere.
obviously resources alone arent enough. Im simply pointing out that past transitions have not been to a relatively resource constrained nation.
5. How will Chinese potential isolationism affect the transition? The US surpassed UK in GDP in 1905, but didnt clearly emerge as number one world power till 1942. Due to a deep reluctance to bear the costs and responsibilities. How does this play out with India and China today?
If you say so.
Id say that the UK was the single strongest power during WW1 (there failure to defeat Germany earlier had to do more with certain specific operational features of the western front, that made it difficult to bring power to bear), and certainly in the interwar world. From 1939 to 1942 they fought Germany largely alone, and were gradually turning the tide. In 1942 the US forces, miliary role and political influence began to dominate. The increasing US position happened gradually through the war years, not all at once.
Hello, no state had a history of an industrial middle class prior to development!
Yes, thats my point. We're dealing with a limited history here. And the two thousand years of Chinese pre-industrial history is not illuminating.
China has already disrupted the global market. If opne believes in capitalism and globalization,
im not sure I do, not as much as you do.
is notion of "not having lots of internal resources" should not matter, since the free movement of materials makes it an outdated worry. China is currently in an export mode, but at some point it builds enough of an internal market to boom.
fact, China exports to get the money to buy resources- in an open world market, there should be no issue. UNless you predict the collapse of the global commodities market, I don;t think this is too great a worry.
I predict nothing. I only point out we dont KNOW how the global commodity market will behave in these circumstances.
Size affects organization and implementation, but there is no theoretical reason why 200 Million and 1 billion should make a difference in having a dmeocracy, specially as communications tehcnology becomes more powerful.
Im not (at this point) making a theoretical argument. Im only pointing out that prior precedent, as precedent, is not probative.
[q]besides, there was no real transition between "UK to US"- the UK was the ex- strongest power in a multipolar system, and by 1905 it was clear the strongest European power was Germany, with Russia's accendence unclear. The two world wars were sorting out the multi-polar system in flux. Today we don't have a real multipolar system.
I was, at this point, focusing on the transition from GDP number one from UK to US. Im quite aware that transitioned through a multipolar world. I would expect that China will emerge as GDP number one in a multipolar world as well.
4. What is the demographic future? Prior transitions, at least those based on new adopters of the capitalist model (thus excluding the different case of the rise of Spain), involved shifts from countries with intrinsically small resource bases to ones with larger resource bases. Venice to Netherlands, Netherlands to UK (and France) and UK to US. The US has a larger resource base than China (or India)- China has a larger population at this time due to accidents of history. Will the transition be different because of this?
Russia has more resources than the US, but you don;t see them going anywhere.
obviously resources alone arent enough. Im simply pointing out that past transitions have not been to a relatively resource constrained nation.
5. How will Chinese potential isolationism affect the transition? The US surpassed UK in GDP in 1905, but didnt clearly emerge as number one world power till 1942. Due to a deep reluctance to bear the costs and responsibilities. How does this play out with India and China today?
The global UN system changes the equation significantly, as "world policing" has been codified, and responsibilities set.
If you say so.
I would dispute the notions that 1. The Uk was the top power until 1942- heck, from 1900 on they were NOT, specially after 1918. And the uS became accendant in 1945, not '42.
Id say that the UK was the single strongest power during WW1 (there failure to defeat Germany earlier had to do more with certain specific operational features of the western front, that made it difficult to bring power to bear), and certainly in the interwar world. From 1939 to 1942 they fought Germany largely alone, and were gradually turning the tide. In 1942 the US forces, miliary role and political influence began to dominate. The increasing US position happened gradually through the war years, not all at once.
Comment