Image is of Abdul-Malik al-Houthi, the leader of Ansarallah.
The death of Zionism has just massively accelerated.
previous preamble
BRICS has expanded to include Ethiopia, Egypt, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. Argentina is currently experiencing technical difficulties due to the election of the ancap clown Milei - once he’s out of office, maybe they can try again.
I don’t really have much to say about this one way or another. BRICS has, so far, made only nervous and small steps towards challenging US hegemony. This isn’t really that unexpected, as only China and Russia are the real “true believers” in ending US hegemony (and even then, China’s government either believes, or is pretending to believe, that reconciliation is still possible). Brazil, India, and South Africa are less enthralled by the concept of dethroning the US, most especially India, who had to make a firm decision in 2023 whether they were going to be on the side of America, or on the side of the Global South, and chose the former, strengthening their military relationship. They’re still best of friends with Russia, but they are very obviously the sussy imposter of the BRICS group.
The prospects of BRICS are only really loosely correlated with the prospects of multipolarism, though. It’s not a process that hinges on BRICS’s successes or failures. It is coming because the contender states (in Desai’s terminology) are irreversibly rising, and the US is irreversibly falling. If it will not be BRICS that leads, it will be a different organization. A better world is not only possible, but inevitable - unfortunately for the US.
I’m taking a week off the updates because I’ve been swamped lately, and also feel the need to reconfigure (and find new) sources. Needless to say that I’ve grown tired of Financial Times headlines, even if they do represent the actual views of the bourgeoisie.
The Country of the Week is Ethiopia! Feel free to chime in with books, essays, longform articles, even stories and anecdotes or rants. More detail here.
The bulletins site is here!
The RSS feed is here.
Last week’s thread is here.
Israel-Palestine Conflict
Sources on the fighting in Palestine against Israel. In general, CW for footage of battles, explosions, dead people, and so on:
UNRWA daily-ish reports on Israel’s destruction and siege of Gaza and the West Bank.
English-language Palestinian Marxist-Leninist twitter account. Alt here.
English-language twitter account that collates news (and has automated posting when the person running it goes to sleep).
Arab-language twitter account with videos and images of fighting.
English-language (with some Arab retweets) Twitter account based in Lebanon. - Telegram is @IbnRiad.
English-language Palestinian Twitter account which reports on news from the Resistance Axis. - Telegram is @EyesOnSouth.
English-language Twitter account in the same group as the previous two. - Telegram here.
English-language PalestineResist telegram channel.
More telegram channels here for those interested.
Various sources that are covering the Ukraine conflict are also covering the one in Palestine, like Rybar.
Russia-Ukraine Conflict
Examples of Ukrainian Nazis and fascists
Examples of racism/euro-centrism during the Russia-Ukraine conflict
Sources:
Defense Politics Asia’s youtube channel and their map. Their youtube channel has substantially diminished in quality but the map is still useful.
Moon of Alabama, which tends to have interesting analysis. Avoid the comment section.
Understanding War and the Saker: reactionary sources that have occasional insights on the war.
Alexander Mercouris, who does daily videos on the conflict. While he is a reactionary and surrounds himself with likeminded people, his daily update videos are relatively brainworm-free and good if you don’t want to follow Russian telegram channels to get news. He also co-hosts The Duran, which is more explicitly conservative, racist, sexist, transphobic, anti-communist, etc when guests are invited on, but is just about tolerable when it’s just the two of them if you want a little more analysis.
On the ground: Patrick Lancaster, an independent and very good journalist reporting in the warzone on the separatists’ side.
Unedited videos of Russian/Ukrainian press conferences and speeches.
Pro-Russian Telegram Channels:
Again, CW for anti-LGBT and racist, sexist, etc speech, as well as combat footage.
https://t.me/aleksandr_skif ~ DPR’s former Defense Minister and Colonel in the DPR’s forces. Russian language.
https://t.me/Slavyangrad ~ A few different pro-Russian people gather frequent content for this channel (~100 posts per day), some socialist, but all socially reactionary. If you can only tolerate using one Russian telegram channel, I would recommend this one.
https://t.me/s/levigodman ~ Does daily update posts.
https://t.me/patricklancasternewstoday ~ Patrick Lancaster’s telegram channel.
https://t.me/gonzowarr ~ A big Russian commentator.
https://t.me/rybar ~ One of, if not the, biggest Russian telegram channels focussing on the war out there. Actually quite balanced, maybe even pessimistic about Russia. Produces interesting and useful maps.
https://t.me/epoddubny ~ Russian language.
https://t.me/boris_rozhin ~ Russian language.
https://t.me/mod_russia_en ~ Russian Ministry of Defense. Does daily, if rather bland updates on the number of Ukrainians killed, etc. The figures appear to be approximately accurate; if you want, reduce all numbers by 25% as a ‘propaganda tax’, if you don’t believe them. Does not cover everything, for obvious reasons, and virtually never details Russian losses.
https://t.me/UkraineHumanRightsAbuses ~ Pro-Russian, documents abuses that Ukraine commits.
Pro-Ukraine Telegram Channels:
Almost every Western media outlet.
https://discord.gg/projectowl ~ Pro-Ukrainian OSINT Discord.
https://t.me/ice_inii ~ Alleged Ukrainian account with a rather cynical take on the entire thing.
— The Yemeni maritime border meets Saudi Arabia’s near Al Qunfudhah, splitting the Red Sea across the middle. From there, it stretches all the way South to Aden, and then continues a few hundred kilometers off the coast into the Gulf of Aden.
— Is that why the United States is bombing Yemen?
[Easy: Success] — Partially.
— It’s the Houthis, sire. They’ve warned all of those ships heading down the Suez Canal that they’re going to blow them to bits if they enter their sea-space. The captains haven’t been listening, so they’ve been getting shot at. And the United States! Oh! The United States have started giving the companies military escorts! It’s a dreadful, dreadful situation! Everyone needs to know how you feel about this!
— But…if Yemen says that the ships can’t go through, isn’t it illegal for the ships to go through their borders anyway?
[Medium: Success] — The international rules-based order doesn’t seem to like it when other countries enforce the rules.
THAT’S HARDCORE
Here’s two pieces that describe and explain the current state of the Chinese economy. I strongly encourage you to read it. It’s very good.
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A new Bloomberg article has insightfully broken down China’s strategy to go well above middle-income status, avoid technological blockades, proceed with high-tech industrial upgrades and take center-stage in the World Economy while completely refuting the Neoliberal Orthodoxy in the process.
As is well known by now, China has consciously and intentionally deflated its Property Sector and non-productive service industries such as Private Tutoring and Gaming; and has funneled that credit toward Industrial development. The consequences of this are astounding. China’s surplus of manufactured goods relative to global GDP is now 2%, a level unseen since the US after World War II, when all Europe and Japan lay in ruins. But, unlike wartime destruction, the de-industrialization of the West was entirely self-inflicted. It sought to alleviate (or do away with) the social and economic pressures of a highly organized and politically conscious working class by exporting industrial manufacturing and the contradictions that come with it.
As a consequence, Bloomberg estimates that 45% of China’s gargantuan manufacturing output (now accounting for more than 1/3rd of global value-added) is exported. But we have long since passed the era of cheap Chinese toys and clothes. China is now competing for the whole cake and biting the heels of Germany, South Korea and Japan, cutting into the they have historically held against China due to their essential provision of hi-tech components that China was unable to make by itself. But that reality has changed. China’s large-scale campaign of industrial upgrading is already bearing fruit. This can be seen by the massive trend toward robotization. China’s manufacturing industry is now more automated than Sweden, America or Switzerland’s and it will soon surpass (or has already surpassed) Japan and Germany, leaving only south Korea (and the much smaller Singapore; not listed in the chart) as competition.
Despite all the talk of “China’s economic slowdown”, there is one metric that doesn’t lie: commodity prices (in the sense of raw materials and basic goods) as they are actively increasing, despite the slowdown in Real Estate construction; China’s New industrial campaign is more than making up for that lost demand, although its further evidence will not be short-term bursts of double-digit growth, but a long structural trend toward high-quality, medium-speed growth. In short, there will be no Japanization. Instead, Arthur Kroeber of Gavekal Dragonomics uses the amusing but apt term of a “Leninist Germany”; although with China we speak of a “Germany” with 17 times the population, or more than the entire Developed World combined.
China is thus defying the neoliberal doctrine of an ever-expanding Service sector. In its latest Five-Year Plan, it has stated in no uncertain terms than from 2020 onward, the share of GDP represented by manufacturing will not be allowed to decrease, and has since risen to 28% from a 26% low. Additionally, China is challenging another neoliberal orthodoxy: hierarchical value chains. It seeks to become industrially self-sufficient; it will not let go of lower-end industries entirely and rely on Africa or Southeast Asia the way the West has relied on China. Xi and the current generation of leadership understand that his path is not only treacherous to economic and national security but would carry with it massive social challenges linked to destruction of livelihoods. Furthermore, it is unnecessary. 1/5th of the world population with ever-increasing degrees of education and automation need not rely on the exploitation of the cheap labor of others. This is the underlying reason for the massive push toward robotization. “To build a complete supply chain” as Damien Ma puts it.
According to China Briefing, China is the only country that possesses all the industrial categories in the UN’s industrial classification. Here we see a reflection of an unavoidable fact: China is an entirely different kind of power. There is zero precedent for a civilization-state who strives for a simultaneously major presence in the World Economy (external circulation) and a complete domestic industrial supply chain at the cutting edge of technological and industrial development (internal circulation) but this is what is entailed by the Dual Circulation policy and the shift toward Domestic Demand, Manufacturing and New Energy industries as the mainstay of Chinese economic development over the coming years. The political-economic uniqueness of this will strike many as novel, particularly those few but annoying voices on the “Left” that seek to draw parallels between China’s rise and that of the Imperialist West.
Instead, one of the major contradictions will be between the declining, post-industrial West as it seeks to hold onto its hegemonic position at the top of global supply chains (it has already completely lost in areas such as EV manufacturing, Solar Panels, etc…) by blocking China from competing in our own markets, after decades of our companies’ access to theirs. This will be one last attempt at choking out China and its ability to bring 1.4 billion people into the Developed World, thus doubling its population. It is a class struggle on a civilizational scale. Such renewed Trade Wars – with possible proxy military fronts if a more hawkish leadership takes hold of the reigns of government in the US – would inevitably require China to re-focus more heavily on domestic-demand-driven industrialization, a somewhat slower path to deal with industrial overcapacity, but this too would have positive long-term effects on China by forcing an even faster rise in Chinese incomes.
Its bet on manufacturing is a sure-fire way to preserve long-term economic and social stability. Bloomberg points out that: “A 2017 study published by Singapore’s Ministry of Trade and Industry found every 100 new manufacturing jobs are associated with 27 new non-manufacturing jobs; by contrast, every 100 new service jobs are associated with only 3 additional manufacturing jobs. It also has the highest innovation potential, accounts for the bulk of economy-wide R&D spending and employs the majority of scientists and engineers.”
Fundamentally, the Real Economy will always triumph over the Virtual. China understands this and, unlike the West, already has a highly competent political system with an advanced class character capable of handling the challenge of building a new energy-based industrial modernity on a scale only comparable to the rise of the West and its offshoots; but in a span of 50, not 500 years. These political-economic changes are bound to shake up the global chessboard and, as I’ve pointed out in previous posts, already are from Novorossiya to Palestine to Myanmar. But we can only have a solid grasp of these geopolitical outbursts if we understand their geoeconomic foundations.
1/5th of the world population with ever-increasing degrees of education and automation need not rely on the exploitation of the cheap labor of others. This is the underlying reason for the massive push toward robotization. “To build a complete supply chain” as Damien Ma puts it.
I just have to point out this is entirely, completely a non-Marxist interpretation of “exploitation”. As long as China allows a private sector, allows private property of production, allows for an economy dictated mostly even if not entirely for profit, it relies on exploitation. It is literaly the definition of capitalism, SCC or not.
Time once again to make superhero of China economy
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China’s economy is currently on the operating table, hunched over by surgeons, chest cavity splayed open, hooked up to a cardiopulmonary machine, surrounded by nurses staring at monitors flashing vital signs. It all looks rather grim. This surgery, however, is not an emergency bypass. That would be too easy. China has had many of those already – stimulus packages, grand infrastructure projects and many rounds of directed lending. Every two decades or so, going all the way back to the founding of the PRC in 1949, the surgeons get ambitious. These guys are mad scientists attempting a comic book trope – to create the ultimate superhero. They want to inject super serum, replace skeletal calcium with adamantium and dose the patient with gamma rays, giving China the powers of shazams out the wazoo.
Deng Xiaoping’s agricultural reforms, privatization and special economic zones of the early 1980s kicked off 20 years of market driven growth. In the late 1990s, Premier Zhu Rongji performed surgery at least as invasive as what is currently being attempted. Zhu’s reforms broke the “iron rice bowl,” laying off 27 million workers from state owned enterprises. This paved the way for another 20 years of growth.
In the lamented “pre-reform” era, China’s mad scientists engineered spectacular growth by increasing investment from a prewar 6% of GDP to 20% in the first Five-Year Plan, covering 1952-1957. This led industrial output to register a compound annual growth rate. The Great Leap Forward accelerated this growth to 66% in 1958 and 39% in 1959 before crashing and burning in 1961 when mismanagement of communal farms and “backyard blast furnaces” caught up with the mad scientists. Course correction starting in 1962 recovered all lost ground by 1965. According to economist Cheng Chu-Yuan, China’s GDP growth averaged 11% between 1952 and 1966, the eve of the Cultural Revolution. (T. C. Liu of Cornell and K. C. Yeh of the Rand Corporation have a lower estimate: 8%.) More importantly, China built a full kit of infrastructure, machinery and equipment capable of driving future industrialization. Mao Zedong threw a wrench into China’s economy during the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976). But through the chaos, as the mad scientists attempted to substitute ideological inputs for material ones, China was still able to achieve GDP growth averaging 5.2%.
Many analysts have a tabula rasa understanding of China’s reform era, as if there had been no economy before Deng Xiaoping. In reality, China’s industrialization started right after the formation of the PRC with some of the fastest growth recorded in the 1950’s and 1960’s. Even during the “low growth” Cultural Revolution, resources directed towards public health (for example, barefoot doctors) and primary education doubled life expectancy and quadrupled adult literacy by 1980 from pre-PRC levels. The mad scientists are now at it again. They have about twenty years of new data not just on China but from the rest of the world. When Zhu Rongji was head surgeon, history had ended and markets reigned supreme. This time around, the surgeons are correcting for market irrationality and negative externalities. The next twenty years is again being determined on the operating table. Three years ago, the surgeons pried open China’s chest cavity with the three red lines credit limits, instantly seizing the speculation driven property sector. Since then, they ripped out unnecessary organs like education companies, clamped the Ant Financial artery and eviscerated the video game industry.
All of this has caused spasms in vital signs from lackluster growth to rising youth unemployment. Wondering whether China will or will not stimulate the economy next quarter or next year is missing the forest from the trees. For the next few years, China’s economy will still be under the knife and whatever adjustments will merely be anesthesiologists and technicians nominally dialing the drugs up and down and adjusting the heart-lung machine to maintain vital signs. What are these mad scientists trying to achieve? We believe President Xi Jinping’s 2020 target of doubling China’s GDP by 2035 stands. That is an average growth rate of 4.7% for 15 years. But beyond just a numerical target, it is important to figure out what superpowers China is trying to acquire. And just as importantly, what Kryptonite factors China is attempting to inoculate itself against. China wants America’s Silicon Valley, but regulated; Japan’s car companies, but electrified; Germany’s Mittelstand, but scalable; and Korea’s chaebol conglomerates, but without political capture. It wants to lead the world in science and technology, but without cram schools. A thriving economy, but with common prosperity. Industry, without air pollution. Digital lifestyle, without gaming addiction. Material plenty, without hedonism. Modernity, without its ills. This is, of course, a wish-list and unrealistically ambitious. But these mad scientists sure as hell are going to try. They’ve developed a taste for it.
In college, early into the semester, we went through a ritual called course exchange. Students gathered in an auditorium to swap classes after sampling lectures for three weeks – satisfaction was not guaranteed. The strategy passed down to underclassmen applied to both course exchange and significant others: “Add before you drop.” China is undergoing – but perhaps botching – the same process with a more party-esque slogan, “Establish the new before abolishing the old.” The surgeons have been on a tear gutting the old. The big kahuna is, of course, the property sector. But right behind are platform monopolies, private education, financial services and video games. The new has been playing catch-up, with 5G equipment, electric vehicles, photovoltaics and wind turbines being leading examples.
From all appearances, the Industrial Party is in ascendance and China will double down on climbing the manufacturing value chain. The Industrial Party is a political identity that believes industry, science and technology should determine China’s future. Adherents believe that China’s strength lie in the technical skills of her population and thus favor hard-science, high-tech industries as opposed to services and business model innovations. Therefore, Chinese politicians, whatever their predisposition, must find a way to create space for this next generation of scientists and technicians to develop themselves. They cannot be confined to a production line at a Foxconn plant. Maintaining social stability means finding a use for future scientists and technicians, which means pursuing industrialization. Is there any other way? The key variable for determining the course of China’s future development is thus the massive number of talented technical and scientific workers. If mistakes were made, it would have been in sequencing and in faith – dropping before adding is a poor strategy in both love and course exchange. China’s mad scientists may have been too confident that electric vehicles and renewable energy would be followed quickly by semiconductors, pharmaceuticals and commercial aircraft.
Perhaps they have reason to be confident. Planning for this surgery has been in the works since 2015 with the Made in China 2025 project. China has been steadily eroding imports of high value added intermediary goods like batteries, precision parts and electrical components, flipping trade with South Korea from deficit to surplus. This has caused much analyst hand wringing over the feasibility of sustained growth, given China’s economic imbalances. Surely countries like South Korea will not take this lying down. China, they say, accounts for 18% of global GDP but only 13% of consumption and a massive 32% of the world’s investment. Continued growth at 4.7% will surely swamp the world with manufactured goods as China’s imbalances, through trade, become an ever larger distortion of the global economy.
This is erroneous. China never properly transitioned from its Soviet era Material Product System (MPS) of national accounts to the United Nation’s System of National Accounts (UNSNA) standard, leaving out much of services from reported GDP. We calculate that China accounts for 22-24% of global GDP and 20-23% of global consumption. We also calculate that household consumption is 50-55% of China’s GDP, in line with global averages. China should easily be able to grow at 4.7% through 2035 with only a modest increase in consumption’s GDP share (5 percentage points over 10 years) without upsetting global economic balances. In the reform period prior to Xi, everything was sacrificed at the altar of economic growth. In the new era, growth has been walked down from 9.6% in 2011 to an average of 4.7% in the Covid years (2020-2023) as an increasing litany of issues were given precedence. Debt however, soared over this time from 175% of GDP to over 300%. What exactly did all that debt buy?
Article continues…
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When Xi assumed leadership of China, he declared that inequality could not be allowed to increase further. Inequality is perhaps the major Kryptonite factor of the American economy which China wasted no time in matching as the economy roared with market reforms. While still problematic, inequality, as measured by the Gini coefficient, has steadily fallen since 2010 largely as a result of massive investment in urbanization, pushing people into cities and pushing cities up the tiering ladder. Today, it would not be strange to consider Chengdu, Chongqing and Hanzhou first-tier cities and peers of Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen. Tier-two cities like Xiamen, Kunming and Suzhou are often considered more livable and trendy in their own quirky ways. Dark-horse cities like Hefei and Ningbo have exploded out of nowhere to become rising tier-two stars. With the installation of high speed rail, tier-three cities like Dali, Lishui and Zibo compete to become the next “it” tourist destination. China also poured resources into stamping out last-mile poverty. While most poverty alleviation in China was through economic growth, recalcitrant extremely poverty could only be eradicated by concentrated marshaling of resources, from relocating entire villages to weekly visits by social workers.
In 2015, journalist Chai Jing produced the documentary Under the Dome and released it online. The documentary, in the style of Al Gore’s Inconvenient Truth, was a polemic against China’s ghastly air pollution. The impact was seismic. Fortunately for the rest of China, Beijing’s geography, a basin surrounded by mountains, is notorious for trapping smog. Out of sight, out of mind was never going to work – senior leadership got to enjoy some of the most polluted air in China. Since peaking in 2012, air pollution in Beijing has been cut by over 60%, with Shanghai falling over 50%. China, which used to dominate the list of most polluted cities, now only claims one spot in the top 20. None of this came cheap, from installing scrubbers in smoke stacks to increasing renewables to moving heavy industry to strict emissions regulations for cars.
During the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution, economic planners theorized that ideological fervor could substitute for material inputs like labor and capital. It worked better in theory. In recent decades, as ideology took a back seat to economic growth, long-brewing problems became existential. Before Hu Jintao handed the reins to Xi, Hu warned delegates to the 18th Party Congress in 2012 that “[corruption] could prove fatal to the party… and [cause] the fall of the state.” The popular opinion in the West is that Xi ended China’s highly successful reform era because of an ideological bent. This is off the mark. Xi was brought in to clean house as the wheels were coming off from excesses of the reform era. Throughout Xi’s decade in office, there has been no letup in his anti-corruption campaign. In 2022, a record 638,000 officials were punished for corruption. While there haven’t been any large scale ideological appeals to the public, it’s a different story within the 98-million-member party. During this time, free market capitalism and liberal democracies also faced their own existential tests. Success or failure going forward will depend on whether liberal institutions remain intact in the West and whether party discipline can be maintained in China.
What the PRC has had since 1949 is a governing party with the political autonomy to play mad scientist. In comic book world, whenever mad scientists try to create the ultimate superhero, things tend to go awry. Deadpool isn’t exactly what his creators had in mind. Serpentor turned out to be a bust. The only success, which we attribute to wartime propaganda, appears to the be Captain America. Of course we live in the real world, not a comic-book world. The question in the real world has always been whether the economy can be engineered by mad scientists from the top down or is it best left to the invisible hand of the market? The conventional wisdom on this has been problematic. The standard economic opinion – against all evidence – is that China was economically stagnant before Deng’s market reforms. The thinking on this for the American economys is undergoing a transformation in egghead land – just how has neoliberal economics benefitted the American people over the past few decades?
In a Q&A exchange at a conference in Malaysia, Eric Li, the barbed-tongued venture capitalist, was asked, “Do you think top-down directives are sustainable in the long run?” To which he replied, “It’s the only thing that’s sustainable.… That’s why America is failing today.” After World War II, Li said, the Americans “lost the ability to do top-down design.”
Leninist Germany
I hate how it still differentiates China from the “developed world” as if China hasn’t already surpassed western Europe and North America in the majority of metrics.
It’s mean, it’s true if used for the right metrics. China receives development aid. A much higher proportion of China’s workforce is engaged in agriculture than “more developed” nations higher up the value chain. (17% vs like 10%) China is able to develop more out of its wealth than NATOids are able to with all their stolen wealth due to the awe-inspiring power of Mao Zedong Thought.
Still the whole “developed nation” terminology gives off the impression you just have to be a good boy and bide your time and follow the rules and your nation will Develop. It’s a misnomer.