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Kathleen Weber's avatar

There is absolutely no one better on the planet than Noah Smith at 'splaining economic issues. He is superbly well informed on economics, and his communication skills are exceptional.

But I frequently disagree with his geopolitical assessments. Even if the US stops supporting Ukraine, Russia cannot win and then attack Poland and the Baltics.

1. As military technology changes, the advantage shifts back and forth between offense and defense. Military analysts agree that the Ukraine war proves that without a robust Air Force, defense Is currently dominant. Neither Russia nor Ukraine has a robust Air Force, and neither has been able to budge the frontline significantly since November 2022. Thus, Ukraine can return to their tactics of 2014 - 2021, and simply hold Russia to the territory they already occupy with relative ease.

2. Because Russia cannot occupy the whole of Ukraine, there is no way they will ever attack Poland and the Baltics. This war has diminished Russia's military resources by at least half. Not even Putin is crazy enough to sign up to attack a NATO country. He would have to totally rebuild the Russian army before he even tried.

3. The following is a minor consideration, but Putin does pay attention to public sentiment in Russia. A telephone poll indicated that more than 50% of Russians would like the war to end right now. The war is so unpopular in Russia that Putin doesn't plan to mention it during his presidential campaign. Russian is currently obtaining most of its recruits from non-Russian populations. If the Russian people have no bodies of loved ones to bury, their only suffering is economic, and Putin can continue to pursue a policy that has basically become unpopular. As for the non-Russian populations, they are so fragmented, that they have little collective political power.

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rahul razdan's avatar

As you point out, on EVs, China has built real capability. Right now, ignoring Tesla, they are likely the best at building EVs...world class. There is also real innovation happening there in mass production of batteries which is why Ford wants to license from Chinese battery maker. The real question is: Will the CCP find a way to screw this up ? We will see, but my guess is yes. One need only look at Alibaba to see what can happen. The regression of the Xi regime vs the Deng regime is very sad.

At a higher level, one thing to keep in mind is that the dominant role of an automobile is declining. At a very fundamental level, conventional passenger cars are one of the worst utilized assets one can own. The average automobile is parked 95%+ of the time. Capitalism, especially driven by the explosion of on-demand services, is relentlessly optimizing this down with sophisticated alternatives which are lower cost and higher productivity. As this continues, the aggregate demand for traditional cars will go down .... based on utilization alone... this can go down by an order-of-magnitude (10X). Virtualization was the first big turn in this move (ecommerce, online education, telehealth, work-from-home, etc), Fleetization (uber, food delivery, other shared services model) is next, and the final turn will be autonomy (when the technology matures).

Fifty years from now the importance of traditional auto will be as muted in the overall economy as trains from the 19th century.

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