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John's avatar

Wow, we have some angry wumao in the chat today, huh?

For my money, by far the biggest question is how the CCP will handle the rapidly-unfolding demographic crisis. Pretty much everything else stems from this. It poses serious threats to the CCP's ability to continue plowing huge amounts of money into military modernization and foreign projects, and also undercuts the overall narrative of a rising, vitalist China vs. an enervated West; China is about to become a far older society than the US even as it potentially surpasses the US economically.

In the short term, I imagine Beijing is also rather uneasy right now due to the COVID outbreak in India, specifically in how it mirrors the CCP's COVID strategy in terms of India having sent large quantities of vaccine abroad. I don't expect that the CCP will have any similar issues at home, as their ability to snuff out any outbreaks before they balloon out of control is pretty robust (and I certainly hope that they're able to keep it under control!) but given the huge quantities of vaccines they've sent abroad, they really cannot afford any kind of outbreak domestically.

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Jonny Axelsson's avatar

There has been no shortage of criticism of the BRI from the beginning. Too many mediocre projects have been funded. Nationally many Chinese wonder why China should fund poor countries when there is no shortage of domestic problems.

Now with BRI losing momentum, this may be the perfect time for other Eurasian actors (like India, EU, ASEAN, Russia, Japan) to join and shape the BRI, somewhat on the model of the AIIB.

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