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Andrew J's avatar

I think figuring out what it is that China wants will go a long way to deciding how far Asian countries and the US need to go to counter China. Though the Chinese communists' irredentist ambitions make complete accommodation impossible.

One slight mitigating factor in terms of China's size is that the working age population has already peaked.

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Al's avatar

Great article, I agree and feel like this is soon to be the biggest challenge going forward. The sooner the West and allies get serious strategically the more options they will still have (kinda like with covid). However, I feel like the role of age demographics doesn't get looked at enough in regards to the rise of the Chinese economy and its economic model. Surely the massive baby boom they had roughly in the 60-70's and the one child policy that followed (leading to few dependents for them) played a big role? Now the consequences are starting to hit and its demographics look worse than all but the very worst in east Asia. Notable is when they ended the one child policy, births only went up for a single year before hitting new lows. In comparison, its developing neighbors and US demographics look quite good. As the shrinking of the Chinese work force accelerates, how big an effect do you think it will have?

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