The Talking Dog

December 12, 2004, Milestones...

This week's visit to our friends at Beijing's People's Daily gives us this account of the PRC having joined the big boys, with over one trillion U.S. dollars worth of annual international trade. That would put China up there with only the United States, Japan, and whoever is in third place (Germany, maybe... the EU as a whole?). To put this in perspective, the entire American annual GDP is in the ten trillion dollar range.

China holds over $500 billion in foreign exchange reserves (mostly yankee dollars, mostly in funny paper like T-bills).

Further, China observes that it employs around 80 million people in its foreign trade related sector... the entire American workforce is right around 100 million people.

In short, in economic terms, our fastest growing creditor is, by far, our fastest growing competitor. In liberal terms, of course, China has little or no worker protections, environmental protections or anything else we watch "liberals" whine about in the context free trade agreements like NAFTA, or without, of course, contract protections and protection of intellectual property rights, which many "conservatives" care about (or, of course, human rights protections, which no one seems to care about).

But, the Chinese are set to clean our clocks. Their slave labor is kicking our ass, and our reaction is to try to turn our own workforce more into theirs (fewer worker and environmental protections, fewer social safety net programs, etc., etc.)! Well, they are starting from a fourth world basket-case. We're starting from being the premier industrial power. My yuans would be on them... a rising work force will kick the ass of a declining, depressed work force. (I think so, anyway).

The other milestone is a tad more grim, though not wholly unrelated: the 1,000th American combat death in Iraq. While over 1,200 American service personnel have already died (needlessly) in Iraq (putting the Iraq adventure well within our top ten all time military adventures in human cost.) Combat casualties excludes total, of course, which would include vehicle and aviation accidents, suicides that managed to get reported and the like. Cakewalk indeed.

I say not wholly unrelated because, of course, it is Chinese economic might that is now paying for our Iraq adventure, because President Go Shopping insisted on cutting taxes for those most able to pay for this adventure. Which means (in case you haven't figured it out) that China (along with Saudi Arabia) has (ahem) the ability to... express interest in our foreign policy decisions (along with other things).

Just saying.


Comments

You could always maintain and develop your lead in technical and scientific skills. Oh no, I forgot, the creationists will knock that one on the head.

Posted by Ron at December 12, 2004 4:07 PM

Wow TD. You got me thinking. Korea gonna be your country's best friend. Just think of one huge "enterprise zone." Ha ha ha!!

Posted by Kim Jong-Illin at December 12, 2004 4:52 PM

Almost forgot. Sorry. Ron, I like you. You some funny mix of "proto human cells." "Creationists?" What you gonna write about next time? Luddites? Albighensians?

Posted by Kim Jong-Illin at December 12, 2004 4:57 PM

What up, Jong! I'm all about some Albighensians. They gotta lockdown on the International Banking Conspiracy. They're gonna pop a cap in our economy.

Posted by irisclara at December 12, 2004 6:58 PM

China has always been big, but your post indeed points to their huge presence in wolrd affairs and economy. How long until Mandarin becomes obligatory in schools? Already there are courses in it at work.

Posted by Camilo at December 12, 2004 8:34 PM

I, for one, welcome our Han overlords.
And if you want another look at the coming
Chinese Ascendancy (if not Hegemony) go to
WWW.skyscraperpage.com and check out 'Diagrams' then 'Buildings-Underconstruction' to see that most of them are being constructed in (wait for it)

China.

And though he 'won' the election, the Bush Emperor has lost the Mandate of Heaven...

Posted by MrBill at December 14, 2004 4:54 PM