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Yaw's avatar

Great article, it sounds like the future of "globalization" is just deepening investment in Asia without being super focused China. Doesn't sound like this is Latin America's time yet, which is a real shame because Latin America should be an easier destination for America & Canada. But as you pointed out the agglomeration, talent, and supply chains are already in East Asia.

One thing though. In our "globalized world" its more regional - 85% of world trade is concentrated in North America, Europe, and East Asia & Pacific while 15% is in Middle East, South Asia, Russia, Central Asia, and Africa.

Here's the breakdown of the three regions:

The EU, UK, Swiss +& Sweden alone is around 40% of world trade (Europe region)

East Asia, South East Asia, & Pacific is around 30% (East Asia region)

USMCA is around 15% (North America region)

Totaling 85% of global trade

In Shannon O Neil's book "The Globalization Myth" she would call this period - regionalization. Especially since half of East Asian trade is within East Asia, two-thirds of European trade is within Europe, and 40% of North American trade is in North America.

What do you think the proportions would be if in Globalization 2.0? I suppose since India and Bangladesh are rising do you think South Asia would become a fourth trade hub? Does "Globalization 2.0" really just mean South Asia emergences the fourth trade hub just like Globalization 1.0 was really just the emergence of East Asia?

Article/Visuals/Data for Global Trade proportion:

https://yawboadu.substack.com/p/who-dominates-global-trade

Article/Visuals/Data for Interregional Trade:

https://yawboadu.substack.com/p/who-dominates-global-trade

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rahul razdan's avatar

Another fantastic article... thanks.... Two points:

1) On Xi not visiting... there is a simpler explanation... China is a mess, he has political opponents, leaving the country right now may not be viable. Most dictators are overthrown right after vacations and overseas trips.

2) The economic analysis is very good... the innovation/technology analysis is missing. The nature of technology acceleration is that the nature/value of "cheap" labor is falling quickly... in favor of robotization. In this world, a small number of large ecosystems will gain investments for regional manufacturing. The North American version is very likely to be Mexico. There will be one (perhaps two) in Asia, and one in Europe. This is not to say that the Mexican hub won't have Chinese owners or the SE Asia hubs won't have American/European owners.

Overall, the actual nature of the work done by the labor will shift significantly.

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