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Vince Cable 超越西方:中國、印度與新世界的塑造

(2026-03-01 01:58:59) 下一個

《超越西方:中國、印度與新世界的塑造》

The eclipsing of the West: Sir Vince Cable on China, India and the decline of the West

by Vince Cable   Sept. 16 2025
https://www.amazon.ca/Eclipsing-West-China-India-forging/dp/B0DYN98X95

Cambridge Development & Alumni Relations Oct 23, 2025

隨著國際秩序開始瓦解,這本見解深刻的著作探討了亞洲超級大國的崛起對未來意味著什麽。

過去三百年來我們所熟知的西方主導的世界正在走向終結。隨著美國退出其作為國際秩序維護者的角色,其他國家正在填補這一空白。其中就包括兩個正在崛起的亞洲“超級大國”。

中國和印度的人口占世界總人口的三分之一以上,擁有巨大的經濟和政治潛力。中國已經在與美國爭奪全球經濟霸主地位,並且在某些方麵已經超越了美國。到本世紀中葉,印度或許會成為世界第二。這些國家將如何應對其在世界舞台上日益重要的角色?這對商業、國際法和應對氣候變化又意味著什麽?

文斯·凱布爾數十年來一直關注中國和印度,他最初是一名專業經濟學家,後來擔任政府高級部長。在《超越西方》一書中,他運用最新數據和畢生的政治經濟經驗,對亞洲超級大國的崛起及其對未來的意義進行了令人信服的闡述。

西方的衰落:文斯·凱布爾爵士論中國、印度與西方的衰落

劍橋大學發展與校友關係處  2025年10月23日

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VpnIrr2jVg8? 

文斯·凱布爾爵士將探討他的著作《西方的衰落》,追溯戰後中國和印度的發展曆程。隨著美國主導的全球體係的衰落,他探討了新興大國的崛起以及全球領導權的未來走向。

隨著美國主導的規則體係和全球機構的衰落(特朗普的政策加速了這一衰落),人們開始思考什麽會取而代之。中國,以及日益崛起的印度,已成為主導經濟力量,同時也對環境產生了顯著影響。中國憑借“一帶一路”倡議已成為擁有巨大政治和經濟影響力的軍事強國;印度則發展出了“多邊結盟”的理念。它們之間也存在著“亦敵亦友”的關係。

誰將最終勝出?歐洲是否有可能成為第四大強國?眾多中小國家(例如英國)的命運又將如何?誰來統籌應對氣候變化、核擴散、流行病、經濟協調和人道主義危機等全球挑戰?

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早上好,謝謝各位前來聆聽我關於這本書的演講。也感謝你們歡迎我再次回到這裏。60年前,我就坐在你們現在的位置上,師從約翰·羅賓遜、卡爾多以及凱恩斯的其他門徒學習經濟學。如果用一個詞來概括這本書,那就是現在流行的“地緣經濟學”,也就是地緣政治與經濟學的交匯點。它主要探討的是中國和印度日益增長的重要性。我並不自詡為這兩個領域的學術權威,但我過去60年來出於家族生意、政治和學術工作等各種原因往返於印度,30年來也出於類似的原因往返於中國。我剛和一群劍橋校友從深圳大學回來。順便提一下,深圳大學的目標之一是在不久的將來成為像劍橋大學那樣的大學。不過,我在這本書裏提出的問題,其實是威廉·德爾·林普爾在他那本精彩的著作中提出的,你們有些人可能看過這本書。這本書提出的問題隻有一個:到本世紀末,印度、中國還是美國會主導世界?我沒那麽雄心勃勃,我的目光隻停留在半個世紀,但基本問題是一樣的。這本書的書名頗具挑釁性,而它的基礎是一張相當簡單的圖表。嗯,我在這裏所做的,是直接使用了國際貨幣基金組織(IMF)的數據,我認為我們都認同這些數據相當可靠。我用它來繪製世界經濟中各主要經濟體的份額:發達工業國家,主要是歐洲、美國和日本(紫色線);新興經濟體和發展中經濟體(綠色線);新興亞洲(紅色線);以及中國和印度(目前主要是中國)的份額(黃色線)。交叉點很清晰,趨勢也非常明顯。你可能會說,世界經濟的趨勢不會永遠持續下去,也可能會出現逆轉,這並非不可能,但目前看來可能性不大。印度的年增長率約為6%或7%,中國官方數據為5%,可能略低一些。印度尼西亞或東南亞的增長率約為5%,非洲盡管麵臨諸多問題,增長率也達到了3%或4%。嗯,發達國家,即使是最具活力的國家——美國,2.5%的增長率和複利是非常強大的,它會產生一種結果,雖然我們目前尚不清楚,但我認為這種結果將會延續下去。

現在,我們來看一下目前的概況。這基本上是在衡量一個國家的經濟規模,你隻需要用到國民生產總值。但是,關於如何衡量一個國家的規模,一直存在爭議。

國際貨幣基金組織、世界銀行、聯合國和其他國際機構肯定會說,如果你隻用國民生產總值來衡量,你會得到非常具有誤導性的數據,因為如果你有100美元,你把它帶到中國、印度,許多其他新興經濟體,你用這100美元能買到的東西比在美國多得多。簡而言之,這就是購買力問題。這本質上是一個問題,因為美國貨幣直到去年都非常強勢。為了消除這種偏見,國際貨幣基金組織和世界銀行呃,看待全球貨幣政策時,更多地參考藍色列而不是黑色列。你會立刻發現,這挑戰了一個普遍的假設,那就是美國是世界上最大的經濟體,其次是中國。

歐盟的規模與美國大致相同,而英國則在榜單上排名第八或第九。但如果你以一種更現實、更真實的方式來看待這個問題,也就是藍色列,情況就不同了。你會發現,中國已經是世界第一大經濟體,而且遙遙領先。如果你指出這一點,會在美國引起相當大的反感。但這是事實。印度排名第四。發達經濟體和發展中經濟體之間的差距,可以從印尼、巴西和其他一些國家的情況中看出。總之,這就是現狀。我的書的一部分內容解釋了我們是如何走到這一步的,為什麽中國,以及現在的印度,發展如此迅速,經濟實力如此強大。但這本書也關乎未來。我剛剛引用了一些預測數據,你可能會說這些預測幾乎毫無意義。我們不知道未來會怎樣。預測本身並沒有絕對的真理。但我引用的是經合組織(OECD)的標準預測,經合組織是位於巴黎的富裕國家俱樂部。這是他們用於氣候建模的標準模型。它可能正確,也可能錯誤。我們不知道。這是他們對本世紀中葉世界可能麵貌的預測。這是一個關於中國相對於美國繼續增長的故事。

雖然增長速度並不驚人,因為中國增速正在放緩,人口也在減少等等。

但即便如此,它仍然會成為當時的主導經濟力量。

仔細想想,這並非不切實際。我的意思是,中國的人口是美國的四倍。

所以,如果到那時他們的生活水平隻有美國的一半,那麽他們的經濟規模翻一番也就不足為奇了,這大致就是這裏所顯示的。

嗯,這個說法非常具有挑釁性,而且我接觸的大多數聽眾,都很難理解,尤其是中國聽眾,那就是印度成為世界第二大經濟體,印度尼西亞排名第四。我們不太關注印度尼西亞,但印度尼西亞是一個龐大且快速增長的新興經濟體,巴西也名列其中。嗯,這就是一種未來世界。正如我強調的,這隻是其中一種預測。你可以設想各種情景。嗯,我隻是想讓你們記住,這就是我們可能走向的世界。

現在,它最終會朝著哪個方向發展,主要取決於兩件事。一是他們如何處理政治,二是他們如何從技術層麵管理經濟。

我嚐試過,你可能覺得這有點異想天開,但我試圖用一張圖表概括中國和印度政治的基本要素。我在這裏想表達的觀點很簡單:盡管它們本質上不同,我們常常把它們視為截然相反的兩極——中國的黨國體製與威權主義的黨國體製與民主的印度——但實際上它們之間存在大量的重疊。

這種重疊源於它們都是非常非常大的國家——14億人口,是英國人口的20倍,這在治理性質方麵對它們提出了某些要求。

我認為描述它們更好的方式不是用我們通常理解的“民族國家”來定義,而是用“文明國家”來定義。它們的共同點是強人領導,即相信必須擁有某種最高權力,一個權威來源。這在中國非常明顯。主席無處不在,有點像皇帝。嗯,印度一直在嚐試創造一些在莫迪時代,這有點兒異想天開,但因為民主的緣故,這有點兒不穩。

試圖創造一種意識形態,一套價值觀和信仰,來統一這些幅員遼闊的國家,這本身就是一個難題。我的意思是,如何讓每個人的腦海中都有一套共同的理念,讓他們覺得自己是同一個整體的一部分?

中國一直在嚐試這樣做。我的意思是,他的思想很難用英語表達。有些人會說,這簡直是天書,非常難懂,但它的核心是“中國夢”,你知道,古老的中國,那些偉大王朝——明、唐等——的中國,如今正在複興。這就是中國夢。

印度領導層一直在嚐試創造自己的統一意識形態——印度教民族主義,它追溯到古老的印度教文明。這存在一個問題,因為15%的人口是穆斯林,基督徒人數很少。

而且南方和北方的人們對宗教的看法存在很大差異。一個經常被忽略的關鍵點是,雖然我們通常傾向於認為中國非常中央集權,但實際上它非常靈活。中國的決策高度分散,經濟上的分散程度遠高於英國。

你知道,市長、省政府或省級領導,例如,中國領導層在大型項目上將比英國市長擁有更大的自主權。這自1980年刁曼改革開放以來,一直是中國的優勢之一。印度的靈活性則源於其聯邦製,這種製度吸收了國內的一些差異,例如領土完整。我的意思是,如何維係一個擁有如此眾多人口且如此多元化的國家?我的意思是,那裏有大量的語言群體。即使在現代中國,仍有約20%的人口不會說普通話。印度的少數民族數量龐大,潛在的分裂可能更大。因此,印度非常重視領土完整。在西方,我們對中國在西藏和西藏問題上的做法以及印度在克什米爾問題上的觀點持相當批判的態度,但這都是這一概念的一部分。他們都必須維係這些非常分散的政權,而且在兩種情況下,他們都擔心某種離心力。除非牢固地維係在一起,否則整個體係可能會分崩離析。兩國都已成為數字化國家,而這正是英國的熱門話題。我們正在討論英國的身份證。

嗯,中國和印度都已經在數字身份的基礎上運作。我不想卷入這場英國的爭論,但奇怪的是,我們很難理解7000萬人擁有數字身份,而印度有14億人口,並且他們在一個統一的框架內,每個人都擁有數字身份,這當然可以讓人們識別他們的身份,但也讓他們能夠獲得非常有限的福利服務、文件、土地權利等等。當然,中國的數字係統更加先進。嗯,盡管我們把一個國家看作是資本主義國家,另一個看作是共產主義國家,但實際上,這些說法在兩種情況下都毫無意義。它們都擁有我所謂的國家資本主義。他們很反感你用這個詞,但它確實適用於兩者。我的意思是,它們是經濟公私各半的國家,大約一半的經濟是私有的,一半是公共的。嗯,你知道,印度的金融體係大部分是國有的,當然,現在也有私有製。

同樣,在中國,如果你願意的話,主導地位是由國家控製的,但同時也有大量的創業活動,成千上萬的私營公司,競爭異常激烈。所以,你會看到資本主義和共產主義的混合體。

他們稱之為資本主義,當然,也稱之為中國特色社會主義。這真是有點諷刺意味。最後,你知道,你如何管理如此龐大的國家?呃,你如何才能創造一些發泄渠道?因為很多人時常感到不滿。印度的情況有所不同,它麵臨著潛在的無政府狀態,但這種狀態得到了控製。令人遺憾的是,這種不滿情緒在印度正日益受到壓製。

而中國則麵臨著相反的問題,他們擁有一個非常專製的體製,你如何才能讓人們發泄情緒?在中國,抗議活動得到了管控。大量的示威遊行、罷工等等都會發生,隻要它們不是直接針對政府首腦和黨的領導人。

在中國的許多地方,這些抗議活動甚至被容忍或鼓勵。所以,他們各自都麵臨著這些挑戰,而且我認為他們應對這些挑戰的方式很相似。我的書的主題之一本質上就是探討他們除了不同之處之外的共同點,以及他們能否以目前的形式生存到本世紀中葉,這實際上取決於此。這兩個國家都有著可怕的災難曆史。嗯,這在中國是一個特別的問題。嗯,我不知道英國學校裏有多少人聽說過打字起義,那是19世紀的重大災難之一。嗯,可能有兩三千萬人就此消失。呃,饑荒戰爭,呃,還有中日戰爭,呃,他們用……來慶祝,呃,你可能還記得幾周前的閱兵式。他們試圖提醒世界,大約有兩千萬人死於抗日戰爭。

當然,他們沒有說的是,主要是國民黨軍隊而不是共產黨軍隊,但這確實是一場災難。

然後,我們還有中華人民共和國成立以來發生的兩起事件。呃,大躍進,可能造成四千萬人死亡,兩千萬、三千萬、四千萬,我的意思是,我們不知道,但人數非常龐大。

呃,然後是文化大革命,它在當代中國人中造成了這種對秩序的極度癡迷,秩序和穩定高於一切,呃,這當然也是為什麽即使是D,這位領先的經濟自由主義者,呃,也賦予了他鎮壓坦納曼廣場暴動的權力,秩序不容妥協。

盡管印度的曆史截然不同,他們的許多災難都發生在英國統治時期,令人遺憾的是,呃,他們確實有關於印巴分治的曆史記憶,呃,更近期的穆斯林與反穆斯林騷亂。因此,在這些幅員遼闊、快速增長、基本穩定的國家背後,潛藏著一種擔憂:如果秩序崩潰會發生什麽?

所以我對未來的預測是基於他們能夠控製住這類事件的假設。但隨之而來的是經濟挑戰。嗯,中國麵臨兩個挑戰。我在中國演講時,令我驚訝的是,當局非常樂意我展示這些內容,實際上,他們也樂意展示之前的大部分幻燈片。

但中國目前正經曆一個非常艱難的階段。過去四十年,中國經濟實現了驚人的10%增長,但近年來,由於多種原因,增速有所放緩。嗯,我略帶諷刺地描述一下。嗯,在很多方麵,中國是資本主義經濟體的典型代表。競爭異常激烈。嗯,而且它也麵臨著資本主義經濟體的經典問題之一:房地產泡沫破裂。呃,而且房地產占他們經濟的20%以上。所有這些巨大的無盡的高層公寓,都是在過去十年左右的時間裏湧現出來的。他們麵臨著一個問題,我相信肯定很想在劍橋也遇到這個問題——房子太多了。房子太多,房價下跌,以及這一切對消費者信心造成的

影響,還有他們現在所謂的內卷,也就是競爭過度,導致價格下跌,造成通貨緊縮。

但同時,還有我所謂的共產主義危機。國家仍然非常強大。嗯,很多資本主義是被分配的。很多道路通向荒蕪之地。嗯,我稱之為依法治國,而不是法治。依法治國是她用來定義中國法律概念的公式。嗯,這在某種程度上是武斷的。我的意思是,如果你得罪了這個政權,而且你還是他們那些巨富之一,你知道,就會發生一些事。這跟美國不太一樣。黨仍然占據主導地位,而且這已經對信心產生了重大影響。我不會誇大中國與世界隔絕的程度。理論上當然是這樣,他們有一個非常嚴格的審查製度,但如果你是企業家或學者,你隻需購買VPN,這樣就有辦法繞過對數據和信息流動的控製。但這確實是個問題,現在的問題是,你知道,中國是在永久性地放緩,還是這隻是一個暫時的時期,他們會憑借他們的經驗渡過難關?但中國和印度之間存在一個根本區別,那就是他們的人口,他們的基本人口結構。嗯,中國現在的情況和日本、韓國以及許多西歐國家差不多,人口已經達到峰值並開始下降。他們通過控製人口過度補償,導致生育率現在很低。嗯,這主要是由於大城市的中產階級不想生育大家庭,以及托兒費用高昂,這些都是一些常見的問題。嗯,所以他們的人口在下降,他們的勞動力也在下降,也就是圖中的黑線。嗯,你可以看到,幾年後,印度的人口更年輕,印度的出生率也在下降,但下降速度沒有那麽快,也沒有那麽劇烈。嗯,印度將會迎來一些人所說的“人口紅利”,更多的年輕人會進入勞動力市場。

這有點誤導性,因為中國人會說,我們會通過技術解決這個問題,他們在機器人和人工智能領域取得了巨大的進步,說,實際上我們不需要這麽多人,我們肯定會通過機器完成製造業和其他很多工作,所以這不是問題。而印度方麵,人口紅利已經被消耗殆盡,因為大量人口失業,尤其是在農村地區。印度的女性很少工作。她們隻有在非常貧窮、不得不工作,或者富裕且想工作的時候才會工作,但印度有很多女性。事實上,印度的女性勞動參與率比沙特阿拉伯還低,這令人驚訝。所以他們沒有有效地利用他們的勞動力。但這可能是一個很大的分界線。但所有這些從世界大局來看意味著什麽?

我一開始稱之為地緣經濟學。我隻是想帶你們回顧一下曆史。我想你們很多人都熟悉“融合陷阱”這個概念。這個概念源於一位名叫格雷姆·艾利森的美國思想家,他的作品現在在中國廣為流傳。艾利森提出的問題是:當一個新的超級大國出現並取代了之前的超級大國時,會發生什麽?比如,我們可以回顧雅典和斯巴達的例子,得出的結論往往比較悲觀:這種情況必然會導致戰爭。艾利森列舉了曆史上17個這樣的例子,其中隻有少數幾個避免了戰爭。英國優雅地讓位於美國、葡萄牙和西班牙都是超級大國,但除此之外就沒有太多其他國家了。此外還有冷戰,當然,冷戰並沒有演變成熱戰,因為蘇聯和美國之間有完善的防禦機製。

但“超級大國崛起”是一種略顯悲觀的預測,它認為當一個正在崛起的超級大國(例如中國,也可能是印度)與一個正在衰落的超級大國發生衝突時,就會出現問題,就會發生衝突。但還有第二個陷阱,這個陷阱較少被提及,它以美國經濟史學家查爾斯·金德爾伯格(Charles Kindleberger)的名字命名。

他解釋說,當不再有一個霸權國家製定遊戲規則時,就會出現一個根本性問題。戰後,我們賴以生存的許多機構,例如國際貨幣基金組織、世界銀行、聯合國和世界貿易組織,都是在美國的領導下建立的。

當然,我們批評美國很多事情,但實際上,正是美國創建了所謂的自由國際經濟秩序,這個秩序已經維持了七八十年。金德爾伯格提出了這樣一個問題:如果不再有一個霸權國家會發生什麽?

問題在於,沒有人會承擔所謂的全球公域的責任。全球公域是指我們共享的、無法僅由各自為政的國家政府來處理的東西。氣候變化,呃

國際貿易法、標準製定、嗯,經濟協調。如果你還記得2008年,世界經濟在銀行業危機後瀕臨崩潰,戈登·布朗召集了以美國和中國為首的二十國集團(G20)主要成員國,他們製定了共同的方案,

以維持世界經濟的運轉,而且他們做到了。如今,這種情況很難再發生了。

嗯,全球衛生應對疫情。嗯,維和行動在很大程度上已經瓦解,嗯,核擴散問題現在再次成為熱門話題,許多從未將自己視為核大國的國家,比如日本、德國,可能覺得他們別無選擇,嗯,還有人道主義援助。金德爾伯格陷阱指的是,當美國衰落,中國不願承擔其中許多責任時會發生什麽。會發生什麽?你知道,共同體完全喪失了。

但與此同時,嗯,我們卻陷入了競爭。我已經用一種可能過於簡單的方式總結了這一點,但我們現在麵臨著兩大超級大國之間的競爭。印度正在快速崛起,但中國顯然主導著國際製造業。美國仍然擁有全球貨幣,這賦予了他們在經濟政策和技術方麵的靈活性方麵巨大的優勢。我稍後會展示一張圖表,但大致來說,我認為在先進技術和軍事方麵,美國占據主導地位,擁有600多個基地,遍布世界各地,而中國隻有兩個。但是中國在海軍能力和核武器方麵也在迅速發展。至於我所說的軟實力,大多數人會從美國而不是中國那裏尋求理念和文化,但也許這種情況正在隨著現任總統而改變。我快速地逐一分析一下。這解釋了目前製造業領域出現的不平衡。中國的製造業產能比幾乎所有發達國家加起來還要多。嗯,規模肯定比這大兩倍左右。

這基本上就是“讓美國再次偉大”(MAGA)運動的核心所在。我的意思是,這正是特朗普過去二三十年來一直競選的政綱。我們該如何重振美國製造業超級大國的地位,因為中國已經占據了這一位置。這其實更複雜,而且我應該說這完全是主觀的。這些隻是我的估計,沒有任何嚴謹性可言。它基於我對科學新聞的閱讀。本質上,我隻是想了解一下,就目前正在進行的這場激烈的技術競爭而言,我們處於什麽位置。近年來最大的戰場是所謂的芯片大??戰。誰能獲得超擊米級芯片?這些芯片是所有現代先進計算和人工智能的基礎。

直到六個月前,我們還認為美國遙遙領先,主要是因為它可以依靠世界上最先進的工廠,而這家工廠恰好位於台灣。呃,但是中國人在過去幾個月裏已經證明,他們可以通過即興發揮和變通,利用低規格芯片實現大量工作,但仍然能夠達到相同的輸出。

這使得人工智能大數據模型領域再次出現了正麵競爭。嗯,我們之前認為美國人領先,但是Deep Seek,我認為在過去幾個月裏出現了三四個類似Deep Seek的案例,這表明中國人可能已經領先了。大多數人隻落後大約六個月。

在這個領域。我這裏沒有提到印度,但印度現在實際上是人工智能最大的消費國。

他們沒有開發自己的大型語言模型,但他們沒有……他們認識到這絕對必要,因此人工智能正在湧入印度的政府係統和私營部門。

我嚐試對所有主要技術領域進行類似的比較。很明顯,在綠色技術方麵,比如風能、太陽能,中國在基礎製造和供應鏈方麵遙遙領先。中國現在在民用核能方麵可能也遙遙領先。

世界上幾乎所有正在建設的民用核電站都是中國製造的,電信領域也是如此。華為——在我看來,我們當初愚蠢地把它趕出了英國市場——現在擁有了先進的5G和6G技術,並在電信標準製定方麵占據主導地位。量子領域我也非常關注,因為我的兒子是加州的一位量子物理學家。

我感覺這將是下一個競爭激烈的領域。他們往往關注不同的方麵,采用不同的模式。美國人正在從基層開始構建他們的量子能力。他們有很多不同的模式。中國人30年前就發現了一個人,並投入了無限的資金,讓他盡可能地發展量子物理學。

據我們所知,他們已經取得了巨大的成就。嗯,所以我不想詳細討論這個問題,隻想提一下先進製造業,中國現在在機器人技術發展方麵遙遙領先。

不僅僅是技術,還有這種生態係統,他們能夠利用大量的分包商,以高度靈活的零工經濟模式運作,這正是中國

工業和服務業目前的運作方式。嗯,但美國在這場競爭中仍然占據優勢的領域是貨幣。嗯,這很重要,因為美國可以維持巨額赤字,為其預算(包括國防預算)融資,並讓其他國家購買他們發行的債務。嗯,無論你談論的是儲備還是交易,美元總是不可避免地是任何國際商業交易的交易對手,但這種情況正在改變。我幾年前就說過這一點。嗯,但自從特朗普上台以來,這種變化正在加速。以美元進行的商業交易數量正在急劇下降。嗯,它並沒有轉向人民幣,因為中國實行外匯管製,但基本上,各國央行和企業現在正在將資金從美元轉移到黃金、日元、挪威克朗等等,美元的實力正在急劇下滑,這在某種程度上可能是目前地緣經濟競爭的關鍵因素之一。我認為政策的關鍵轉折點在於……我構建了這個……其中一些數字隻是近似值,但這解釋了為什麽特朗普的關稅如此重要。美國在內戰時期曾是一個高度保護主義的國家。你可能還記得,這場戰爭主要是因為南方使用奴隸製來維持其經濟,這種經濟以出口初級商品和進口製成品為主,而北方則希望保護其製造業。但在19世紀,隨著美國製造業競爭力的提升,關稅逐漸下降,隻有麥金利總統例外,特朗普視他為自己的偉大英雄。

到第一次世界大戰時,美國基本上已經取消了關稅。然後是兩次世界大戰之間的時期,包括英國在內的所有國家都訴諸關稅保護來對抗經濟蕭條。

美國實行了斯穆特-霍利關稅。但自第二次世界大戰以來,貿易限製、關稅和非關稅措施的取消趨勢一直在持續,直到特朗普上台。這就是我們今天所處的境地。當然,關稅隻是一種技術手段。有很多不同的貿易管理方式,包括出口管製。但是,存在一種我在這裏闡述的潛在理念。

我引用了老布什的話,我認為這代表了美國在特朗普上台之前的自由主義正統觀念。我們不希望美國與世界接軌。但現在我們拒絕全球化,而且這種信息每天都在被強化。中國人則走了完全相反的路。米通完全專注於中國,對外部世界毫無興趣,除了偶爾推動革命之外。但她現在卻把這奉為中國的口號。

我們想要全球化。我們想要國際貿易。中國人現在想要在國際貿易和國際貿易規則方麵盡可能地主導或製定議程。我的意思是,這隻是一個過於簡化的概括。世界局勢以及正在發生的事情,但我認為這是一種相當公平地概括當前觀點的方式。

當然,一個國家的規模不僅僅關乎經濟。我們都非常關注氣候變化,你會發現中國現在占全球溫室氣體排放量的三分之一左右。當然,他們會指出,曆史上情況並非如此。

你知道,英國和其他國家在19世紀燃燒了大量的燃料。但就目前而言,中國是第一大國,印度正在成為第二大國。它還沒有完全達到第二的位置。這兩個國家都燃燒了大量的煤炭。

但這裏的悖論在於,這兩個國家是溫室氣體排放的主要來源。它們也是解決氣候變化的主要來源。對吧?我認為,近三分之二的可再生能源投資都發生在中國。印度現在也占了很大一部分。所以他們既是問題的根源,也是解決方案的來源。呃,我不知道你是否關注了習近平主席本周宣布的氣候目標,環保人士譴責這些目標非常不足。呃,但僅僅是中國表明自己是一個相信氣候變化並采取行動的國家,就足以讓他們與美國形成鮮明對比,中國和印度將在未來COP氣候大會上有效地製定議程。

嗯,最後,在過去的幾分鍾裏,我試圖簡化這一切的含義,它指的是世界實際的治理方式。當然,傳統上,我們有戰後建立的全球機構,比如二十國集團(G20),直到最近,它還是所有主要發達國家和發展中國家決策者的聚集地。

但近年來,我們看到了這種碎片化的局麵,或者說,開始出現七國集團(G7),即富裕國家和所謂的“磚塊”(指發展中國家集團),這是一個協調非常鬆散的組織,這些國家之間並沒有太多共同之處,實際上有些國家之間甚至存在爭端。盡管如此,它仍然成為了一些關鍵領域國際決策的基礎。

實際上,我隻想重點關注一兩個方麵。一個是所謂的上海集團。

你可能已經注意到,幾周前,她與莫迪在一次會議上會麵,那次會議就是上海集團,它本質上是由亞洲的專製國家組成的。就是這個國家,呃,還有印度。

他們關注的是打擊恐怖主義,打擊分裂分子。

嗯,嗯,誇紮。它並不完全是軍事聯盟,完全不是那種聯盟,但它是一個對話平台,但它是他們共同利益的信號。嗯,另一方麵,有一個有趣的組織叫做中共中央政策合作組織(CJTP),這是一個跨太平洋組織,最初由奧巴馬設立,目的是阻止中國加入,但美國後來退出了。嗯,中國想成為成員。嗯,英國是成員。英國是亞洲國家。你可能沒注意到,但我們已經加入了這個亞太組織。嗯,所以這是一種粗略的概括。我當我這樣做的時候,我覺得我把它過於簡單化了。所以我重新重新嚐試了一下。雖然我不指望你們能看懂所有的小圖表,但我想表達的重點是,曾經所謂的“世界政府”如今已被數量龐大的複雜國家網絡所取代,這些網絡往往以貿易為中心。例如,RCE(圖中所有紫色圓點)是東南亞的一種歐洲共同市場。MECAU正在推動拉丁美洲的融合。COMESSA則是一個非常基礎、相當不發達的非洲一體化機製。但我想表達的重點是,盡管沒有全球規則和全球機構,我們仍然保持著相當程度的合作,但這種合作正在瓦解為各種區域性和功能性的集團。最後,我在書中用一章的篇幅探討了,如果這兩個是未來的超級大國,它們之間會是怎樣的關係?我認為,用一個詞來概括就是“亦敵亦友”。你知道,他們之間既有合作的因素,也有敵對的因素。我的意思是,他們四五年前才打過仗。當時發生了嚴重的軍事衝突,而且幾個月前,中國通過武器供應間接支持了巴基斯坦,參與了巴基斯坦最近的邊境衝突。所以,邊境存在爭議。直到最近,印度還在尋求與西方建立準軍事聯盟。實際上,他們之間存在競爭關係,而且印度信奉民主。我的意思是,印度的民主製度可能在某些方麵有所妥協,但它的價值觀體係不同。但他們也有很多共同點,你知道,而且我們都知道,他們都依賴俄羅斯石油,而且他們拒絕接受任何反對意見。他們在打擊伊斯蘭原教旨主義方麵有著共同立場,無論這些原教旨主義是在克什米爾還是在習近平的領導下。ng Jang,呃,他們都希望以大致相同的方式改革世界,呃,他們都認同“全球南方”的概念,認為自己是其中一員,與西方相對。他們在氣候問題上立場一致。嗯,而且他們在很多方麵都擁有類似的經濟政治模式。那麽,這一切最終會走向何方呢?呃,最後我想說的是,我在Shovel公司的情景規劃團隊完成了我的商業實習。呃,我們被教導要以一種嚴謹的方式思考未來,通過邏輯清晰且合理的情景。呃,這些情景並非預測,而是第一步,即識別一些關於未來的關鍵不確定因素。我剛才隻是嚐試總結了一下。我相信你們還能想到很多,其他的,呃,但我隻是列舉了一些。但我想要引出的是,三種不同的未來圖景。中國和印度的崛起,以及它們與美國的競爭,這一切最終將如何發展?

你知道,這很大程度上取決於烏克蘭戰爭的走向,以及圍繞基礎技術的競爭。但我勾勒出了三種不同的世界圖景,最後一章試圖為這些圖景增添血肉。

第一種圖景,我認為在特朗普上台之前相當合理,那就是會出現一個全球西方陣營。你知道,大多數新興市場會意識到它們的利益主要在於歐洲和美國。於是,就會出現被漫畫式地描繪成“邪惡軸心”的勢力,比如中國、俄羅斯、伊朗、阿富汗、委內瑞拉等等。但現在看來,這種說法已經過時了。

嗯,許多曾經傾向於西方世界的主要國家,尤其是印度和巴西,都對特朗普的執政方式感到非常不滿,以至於它們正在朝著不同的方向發展。但直到最近,全球西方格局一直被認為是最合理的未來展望。然而,現在開始出現一種新的觀點,即圍繞新興大國形成不同的勢力範圍。在某種程度上,特朗普似乎也印證了這種觀點。他說:“我隻關心美國。我對那些被他粗暴地稱為‘非洲的坑’的地方發生的事情不感興趣。”而那些國家正在發展自己的行事方式,巴西正在成為一個真正的大國,中國在東亞,印度在次大陸也有可能崛起。這就是人們有時所說的多極世界。

有很多跡象表明這個概念是成立的。嗯,問題在於我之前提到的金德爾伯格陷阱。我的意思是,誰來守護世界?你知道,你可能在守護你的地區和你的勢力範圍,但誰來守護世界?嗯,這實際上是一個非常令人擔憂的局麵。然後,現在又出現了特朗普時期發生的事情,國際機構的崩潰。嗯,我稱之為漩渦,不穩定因素自我滋生,最終導致某種災難。我們不知道那是什麽。可能是重大的經濟崩潰,可能是氣候災難,也可能是有人開始使用核武器。各種各樣的可能性,如果沒有秩序,沒有安全的聯盟,災難就會發生。也許,我想以樂觀的語氣結束,也許在災難之後,有人會設計出一種更適合世界新經濟格局的新型多邊主義。呃,但我需要以一個樂觀的結尾來結束。呃,你知道,這三個是我腦子裏想到的,對吧?我的意思是,你可以用很多不同的方式看待未來,但這三個似乎是比較合理的,呃,描繪了世界發展的方向。

好的,謝謝大家的關注,我很樂意回答問題。

首先,謝謝。嗯,也許我想表達一下同樣樂觀的立場,假設美國繼續舉行選舉,嗯,我們是否過分強調了. 特朗普的持久性?我們是否已經過分強調他的持久性了?就像你知道的,他會不會在幾年後,甚至在中期選舉不再那麽重要之後,就悄悄下台?

更傳統的共和黨……嗯,那不是自由主義者的夢想嗎?

但這並沒有發生,原因有二。首先,他不僅僅是一個特立獨行的人,他擁有極其強大的、受情感驅動的支持基礎,對吧?這代表著一場運動,而不僅僅是一個古怪的人。其次,當然,他們正在接管各種機構。你知道,法律界,你知道,與美國寡頭結盟的大公司,大學正在被摧毀,或者至少被削弱。特朗普……

我的意思是,這是一場正在發生的革命。事實上,中國人經常開玩笑說之所以會這樣,是因為你知道,這顯然存在安全風險。但每當我問我們的安全人員:“你們願意與中國人合作嗎?”他們說:“是的,我們可以應付。”但後來發生了什麽?我於2015年離開政府。

不久之後,出現了一個問題:我們是否希望華為在5G技術領域發揮領導作用?對此,人們有一些保留意見,但特蕾莎·梅提出了一個折衷方案,即華為不能參與5G的核心功能,但我們歡迎他們參與所有外圍功能等等。這時,美國人介入了,說不行。基本上,我們不希望英國成為中國新興電信基礎設施的一部分。我們不會允許你們這樣做。基本上,他們說,如果英國堅持與華為合作,我們將不會向英國提供關鍵組件。因此,華為不僅被禁止參與5G項目。他們已經被從係統中移除了。你知道,英國電信(BT)在過去兩三年裏一直在逐步淘汰華為的設備,結果導致英國在關鍵的電信基礎設施標準(例如延遲速度)方麵倒退了三四年。在我看來,這是我們近年來做出的最糟糕的決定之一。至於違抗美國會造成什麽後果,我不知道,但我的直覺是,我們應該在合理且安全的領域與中國合作。接下來要討論的經典領域是電動汽車,這是一個棘手的問題,因為中國的電動汽車現在在技術上遠勝於我們或歐洲人,而且價格更低,他們想要主導這個行業。我認為答案是,對中國人說

就像我們在撒切爾夫人執政時期對日本人說的那樣。你可能還記得,她鼓勵日本在桑德蘭建立日產工廠。所以我們應該對中國人說,我們不會用現金購買你們的電動汽車,但如果你們想在這裏建廠,並且能夠證明你們確實向英國轉移了技術,我們歡迎你們。

目前這場辯論正在進行中。但我認為我們應該對關係進行對衝。美國正變得完全不可靠,奉行保護主義。我們正以一種非常不健康的方式被他們的科技公司所主導。我們必須與印度合作。印度非常重要,而且在某種程度上威脅性更小。但我的方法是分散風險。

您提到了美國衰落對全球公域的威脅。

嗯,您認為有可能保護和維護這些公域嗎?如果可能,該如何做?嗯,這非常困難。我的意思是,我不知道該怎麽做,你知道劍橋是南極計劃的中心,而南極正在發生的事情非常非常令人擔憂。我的意思是,直到最近,它還被視為全球公域。它不屬於任何人。它被視為科學研究和極地探險的場所。

但過去十年,中國在南極發生的事情是,所有大國都瓜分了南極的領土。俄羅斯建立了基地,他們稱之為科學基地,但顯然並非如此。中國也是如此。

印度,我認為,作為南極的一部分,甚至沙特阿拉伯,我認為,也已經消失了。嗯,他們現在做的本質上是礦產勘探,這違反了南極洲的規定。嗯,現在爆發了一場激烈的爭論,爭論的焦點是誰在保護企鵝,因為,嗯,企鵝種群正在遭受打擊,除了英國和其他一些,好心人,嗯,沒有人履行他們的生態責任。所以我的意思是,南極洲,是一個很好的例子,說明了當全球公域的紀律崩潰時會發生什麽。嗯,幸運的是,在,很多領域,都有有效的國際合作。

嗯,說實話,我不相信中國人能承擔所有這些責任。我的意思是,習近平主席有一個全球理念。他稱之為全球發展倡議,和全球安全倡議。嗯,但這並非為了主宰,而是為了確保世界按照中國的利益運轉。所以他們也沒有某種,全球視野,而美國人正在退出。嗯,我認為……我認為……

歐洲在這方麵確實負有重大責任,那些看到很多糟糕的事情正在發生的中等強國,真的應該攜手合作來阻止這些事情。

抱歉,我想我們時間到了。我們時間到了。抱歉。但謝謝大家的關注。

Eclipsing the West: China, India and the forging of a new world 

by Vince Cable   Sept. 16 2025
https://www.amazon.ca/Eclipsing-West-China-India-forging/dp/B0DYN98X95

As the international order begins to crumble, this incisive book asks what the rise of the Asian superstates means for the future.

The Western-dominated world we have known for the past three hundred years is coming to an end. As America withdraws from its role as enforcer of the international order, other countries are moving in to fill the void. Among them are two rising Asian ‘superstates’.

Accounting for more than a third of the world’s population, China and India have the potential to wield enormous economic and political power. China is already vying with the US for the top spot in the global economy, and on some measures has surpassed it. By the middle of the century India may be number two. How will these countries navigate their growing roles on the world stage? What are the implications for commerce, international law and the fight against climate change?

Vince Cable has followed China and India for decades, first as a professional economist and later as a senior government minister. In Eclipsing the West he draws on the latest data and a lifetime of political and economic experience to offer a compelling account of what the rise of the Asian superstates means for the future.

The eclipsing of the West: Sir Vince Cable on China, India and the decline of the West

Cambridge Development & Alumni Relations Oct 23, 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VpnIrr2jVg8? 

Vince Cable discusses his book Eclipsing the West, tracing the post-war development of China and India. With the decline of the US-led global system, he explores the rise of new powers and the future of global leadership. 
 
With the decline of the US-led system of rules and global institutions, accelerated by Trump, the question arose as to what might replace it. China and, increasingly, India emerged as dominant economic powers, also with a significant environmental footprint. China had already become a major military power with substantial political and economic influence through its Belt and Road Initiative; India developed ideas of ‘multi-alignment’. They were also ‘frenemies’. 
 
Who would prevail? Was Europe potentially a fourth major power? And what would happen to many middle (UK?) and small states? Who would orchestrate responses to global challenges like climate change, nuclear proliferation, pandemics, economic coordination and humanitarian crises?
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Well, good morning and uh thank you for coming uh to my talk on on on this book. Um and thank you for welcoming me back. Um 60 years ago I was sitting where you are. Um being taught economics by John Robinson and Caldor and the other disciples of Canes. Um but but this book if I'm summarizing it in one word is is what's now fashionably called geoeconomics where geopolitics and economics collide. Um it is essentially about the importance and growing importance of both China and India. I don't claim to
be an academic authority on either but I have been going backwards and forwards to India for 60 years for a mixture of family business politics and academic work and 30 years to China for similar mixture of reasons and I've just come back from the University of Shenzen with a group of Cambridge alumni. Um I should just point out in passing that one of the University of Shenzen's
um ambitions is to be Cambridge in not too many years. Um but that the question I'm asking um in this book is posed by William Del Rimple in this wonderful book which some of you may have seen which is the only questions are whether it is India, China or the United States which dominate the world by the end of this century. Uh I'm not quite as ambitious. I don't go beyond half a
century but um the same basic question. uh and the book has a somewhat provocative title. Uh and the basis of it is this fairly simple graph. Um it's what I've done here is I've just taken numbers from the IMF which I think we would agree are fairly reputable uh to
plot the shares in the world economy of the uh developed industrial countries basically Europe, America and Japan which is the purple line uh the green line which are emerging and developing economies. uh and red line which is emerging Asia and the yellow line which is the combination of China and India mostly China for the moment uh and the crossover point uh is clear and the
trend is very clear now you may say you know the world just doesn't keep trends
going forever and it may well there may be a reversal it's possible but it's seems unlikely at the moment India's
growing by about 6 or 7% % a year. China officially five maybe a bit less. Um
Indonesia or Southeast Asia about 5%. Uh Africa despite its many problems 3 or
4%. uh and the developed world even the most dynamic country the United States
two 2 and a half% growth and compound interest is a very powerful thing and it
produces an outcome which I would suggest we don't know but I would suggest is going to perpetuate this
trend now just a snapshot of the present uh
this is measuring the economic size of countries basically you just take the
gross national product. But there is a controversy about how you actually
measure the size of countries. And certainly the IMF, the World Bank, the
United Nations and other international bodies would say that if you just take
G&P numbers out of the book, you get very misleading figures because if you
have a $100 and you take it to China, India,
uh many other emerging economies, you get an awful lot more for your money than if you spend $100 in the United
States. And this is put put very simply that's the purchasing power problem. Uh
and it's essentially a problem created by the fact that the United States until at least until the last year had a very
strong currency. So to eliminate that bias the IMF and the World Bank uh look
at GMP in terms of the blue column rather than the black column. And you
see immediately it challenges one of the uh common assumptions that everybody
makes which is the common assumption is that the United States is the biggest economy in the world followed by China.
Uh the European Union about the same size and then you know the UK is about
number eight or nine in this list. But if you look at it in a more realistic
authentic way, which is the blue column, you'll see that China is already the
biggest economy in the world by some distance. This is um provokes quite a
lot of um irritation in the United States if you point this out. But um it it is a fact. Uh and India is number
four. uh and the disproportion between developed and developing economies is
illustrated in relation to Indonesia, Brazil and other countries. Anyway,
that's today. Uh and part of my book is explaining how we got there, why China
and now India are growing so rapidly and becoming economically so dominant. Uh
but it's also about the future. Now I've just taken a you know projections
you say almost meaningless. We don't know what the future holds. Um projections have no inherent truth. Um
but I've just taken the standard projection of the OECD which is the rich
nations club in Paris. Uh and it's the standard model that they use for their
climate modeling. And it may be right or wrong. We we don't know. This is their
anticipation of what the world could well look like in the middle of the century. And it's a
story in which uh China continues to grow relatively speaking relative to the
United States. Um not spectacularly because China is slowing down. It's running out of people amongst other
things. Uh but still um it becomes clearly the dominant economic power of
that time. Um, and it's it's not too stupid when you think about it. I mean, there are four times as many people in
China as the United States. So, if their living standards are half of the US by
that time, it wouldn't be surprising if they had doubled the size of their economy, which is roughly what's showing
here. uh the what what is very provocative and um most of the audiences
I speak to find find it difficult to get their head around and particularly I would say Chinese audiences u is the
idea that India becomes the the second major economic power in the world um and
Indonesia number four we don't think very much about Indonesia but Indonesia is a a big and rapidly growing uh
emerging economy uh Brazil also up there. Uh so that's the a sort of
futuristic world. As I I stress this is just one projection. You can run all
kind of scenarios. Um but but just asked you to hold in your head the idea that
this is the kind of world that we could be heading towards.
Uh now whether it heads in one direction or another will depend on two things
fundamentally. One is how they manage their politics and the other is how they manage their economics in a technical
way. And I've tried and this you may think this is sort of ludicrously ambitious but I've tried to capture the
essential elements of Chinese and Indian politics in one chart. And the simple
point I'm trying to make here is that although they are fundamentally different and we often pose them as
polar opposites, the party state of China versus an authoritarian party
state versus democratic India actually there's an enormous amount of overlap
and that overlap comes from the fact that they are very very large countries
1.4 4 billion people that's 20 times the population of the UK and that imposes
certain imperatives in terms of the nature of governance in in these
countries and I think a better way of describing both of them is in not nations countries in the way we normally
understand but civilization states and what they have in common
um strongman leadership it's the belief that you have to have some apex power, a
source of authority. It's very obvious in uh China. Um the the chairman is
everywhere sort of emperor type figure. Um and India has been trying to create
something a little bit sillier in the in the mode Modi era, but that's a little bit more precarious partly because of
democracy. uh an attempt to create a sort of ideology a set of values beliefs
that that create that unifies these sort of vast countries is difficult idea. I
mean how do you have a common set of ideas in everybody's head that makes them feel they're part of the same
entity? Um and she in China has been trying to do this.
I mean his thought is very difficult to translate into English. It's very gobbledegook some people would say very
difficult but but it at its heart is the idea of chi the China dream that you
know old China the China of the great dynasties the Ming and the Tang and the other is now being reborn. This is the
China dream and the Indian leadership has been trying to create its own
unifying ideology the Hindutva which is reaching back to ancient Hindu
civilization. There's a problem with that because 15% of the population are Muslims and small number of Christians
and there's a big division between the way people in the south and the north look at uh religion.
Uh a key point which is often forgotten is that although we often tend to think of China in particular as very
centralized, it's actually very flexible. uh decision making in China is
highly decentralized, sort of economic decentralized much more than the UK. You
know, a mayor, a provincial uh government or provincial leadership,
party leadership will have much more discretion over big projects, for example, than a a mayor of a British
city. And this has been part of the strength of China since the reform and
opening up which started with Diaoing in 1980. Um and the Indians get their flexibility
from having a federation which absorbs some of the the differences within the
country. Territorial integrity. I mean how do you hold together a country of so
many people which is so varied? I mean there vast numbers of um language
groups. I mean even in modern China about 20% of the population don't speak Mandarin. Uh enormous numbers of ethnic
minorities even bigger divides potentially in India. And so an enormous
emphasis on territorial integrity and and in the west we are very rather
critical of the Chinese approach to Tibet and Shing Jang and the Indians
view of Kashmir but it is all part of this concept. They both have to hold
together these very disperate states and in both cases a fear of kind of
centrifugal forces. the whole thing could fly apart unless it's held together very firmly. Both have become
digital states and this is topical UK. We're talking about ID cards in the UK.
Well, both China and India already operate on a digital identity basis. Um
I I don't want to enter into this British debate, but it seems odd that we we struggle to get our heads around 70
million people having digital identities, but the Indians have 1.4 four billion and you within an andar
framework which is everybody has a digital identity which enables well of
course people to identify them but also they to have access to very limited
welfare services, documents, land rights, things of this kind and of
course China uh has a even more advanced digital system. um both of despite the
fact that we regard one as sort of capitalistic and the other as communist
actually those those phrases mean nothing in in both cases both of them
have what I would call state capitalism they get very annoyed when you use that phrase but they applies to both and what
I mean by that they're 50/50 countries about half of the economy is private half of it's public um and this is you
know the Indian financial system is mostly state owned though of course you have you know present ownership.
Similarly in China the the commanding heights if you like are state directed
but an enormous amount of entrepreneurial activity tens of thousands of private companies ferocious
competition. So you get this fuel mixture of capitalism and communism
um which they call capitalism of course socialism with Chinese characteristics. nice bit of kind of irony.
And lastly, you know, how do you manage gigantic countries? uh how do you sort
of create escape valves because a lot of people are unhappy some of the time and
uh India starts from the the a different point that the the potential anarchy but
which is reigned in um that desense is increasingly curbed sadly in India and
the Chinese have the opposite problem of having a very authoritarian system and how do you allow people to let off steam
and that protest is managed in China. You vast numbers of demonstrations,
strikes, these things happen providing they're not directed directly at the head of government and the party. Um
it's tolerated even encouraged in many parts of China. So they they each have
these challenges and they deal with them in a similar way I would argue and one
of the themes of my book is essentially about what they have in common apart from what they have different and
whether they can survive in their present form till the middle of the century really depends on this. Uh both
countries have a history of horrendous catastrophes.
Um and this is a particular issue within China. Um I don't know how many people in British
schools for example are ever told about the typing rebellion which was one of the great cataclysms of the 19th
century. Um probably 20 30 million people just disappeared. Uh famine war
uh and the uh China Japan war um which they celebrated with this um you may
have remember the parades a few weeks ago. They were trying to remind the world that about um 20 million people
died in the battle against the Japanese. What they don't say, of course, it was the nationalist army rather than the communist army mostly, but it was a
cataclysm. And then we have the two that have occurred since the foundation of the PRC. Um the great leap forward which
may have killed 40 million people, 20, 30, 40, I mean we don't know but vast.
uh and then the cultural revolution which has created within the present generation of Chinese this utter
obsession with order uh order and stability above all uh which is is of
course why even D was the leading kind of economic liberal uh gave his
authority to crushing the Tanaman Square revolt order cannot be compromised and
although Indian history is rather different and many of their cataclysms has occurred under British rule sadly uh
they do have this historic memory of partition uh more recently seek uh and Muslim u
anti-Muslim riots. So lurking at the back of these enormous, rapidly growing,
fundamentally stable countries, you have this worry, you know, what happens if
order breaks down? And so my projections about the future are based on the assumption that they can keep this kind
of thing at bay. But you then have economic challenges.
Um, China has two. I was surprised when I gave my talk in China that they the
authorities were perfectly happy for me to show this and indeed the earlier slides most of them
but China's currently going through a very difficult phase. They've had uh four decades phenomenal 10% economic
growth but it's been slowing in recent years for a combination of reasons. Um,
and this is my slightly satirical way of describing it. Um, in many ways, China
is the ultimate capitalist economy. Ferocious competition. Uh, and what it's
it's had one of the classic problems of capitalist economies. They had a property bubble that's burst. Uh, and
property accounts for over 20% of their economy. all these enormous
endless high-rise flats which have popped up in the last 10 years or so. And they have the problem that I'm sure
you'd love to have in Cambridge of too many houses. Too many houses, falling house prices, and all the effect that
this has had on consumer confidence uh and uh and and what they now called
involution, which is too much competition, driving down prices, creating deflation.
But there's also a what I call a crisis of communism. The state is still very powerful. Um a lot of capitalism is
allocated. A lot of roads to nowhere. Um what I call rule by law, not rule of
law. The rule by law is the formula which she has created to define Chinese
concept of law. Uh and it's somewhat arbitrary. I mean, if you fall foul of
the regime and you're a um one of their, you know, enormous billionaires, um you
know, something happens. It's not quite like in the United States. The party still dominates and uh it has had a
significant effect on confidence. Um I wouldn't exaggerate the extent to which
uh China is cut off from the world. It is theoretically of course they have a very rigid system of censorship but if
you're a an entrepreneur or an academic you just buy a VPN so that there are ways of um getting around the controls
over the flow of data and information but it's uh it is a problem and the question now is you know is China
permanently slowing down or is it this is a temporary period which they will pass with their um experience of
competent But there is one fundamental difference between China and India which is in
terms of their population, their basic demography. Um, China's now reached the
point pretty much the same as Japan, Korea, uh, many Western European
countries that its population is peaked and is now falling. Uh, they
overcompensated through population control and fertility levels are now pretty low. um largely
caused by the the middle classes in the big cities not wanting to have large families, the cost of child care, kind
of familiar sorts of problems. Um so their population is declining and their
labor force is declining which is the black line. Uh and you can see in a few
years time India which has a younger population the birth rates are also falling in India but not so rapidly or
radically. um India will will have what some people call the demographic
dividend more young people coming into the labor market. It's slightly misleading story because the Chinese
will say well we'll deal with this problem by technology an enormous amount of progress in
robotics and artificial intelligence say well actually we don't need all all these people we'll certainly do
manufacturing and and much else through machines so this is not a problem and on
the Indian side the demographic uh dividend is uh been dissipated because
large numbers of people are unemployed uh particularly in rural areas. Very few women in India work. Um they do if
they're very poor and they have to uh and if they're affluent and want to but
there's a large number of women. It actually female participation in India is low than in Saudi Arabia surprising.
So they they don't they're not using their uh labor force effectively. Um but
that potentially is a is a big dividing line. But what does all this translate
to in terms of the sort of big picture of the world? What I started off by
calling geoeconomics. I'm just taking you back to a bit of um
history here. Many of you will be familiar I think with this idea of the fusidities trap. This is um concept that
emerged from an American thinker called Graeme Allison quite widely read in
China now which is the question what happens when uh you have a new
superpower and it displaces the previous one. Um it's you know you go back to
Athens and Sparta you know and the somewhat pessimistic conclusion is that
this situation invariably leads to war and Allison cited I think 17 cases
through history only a handful of which have avoided war the British grace
gracefully gave way to the United States the Portuguese to the Spanish but there weren't many others uh and there was the
cold war which of course didn't become a hot war because we had sophisticated guard rails between the Soviet Union and
the United States. But the susidity strap is a somewhat pessimistic prediction that when you have a rising
superpower i.e. China potentially India colliding with a declining superpower
then you get trouble and you get conflict. But there is a second trap which is less commonly discussed which
is named after a man called Charles Kindleberger American economic historian
uh who explained that that there was a fundamental problem when you no longer
have a hegmonic power setting the rules of the game and and post war many of the
institutions that we've relied on uh the IMF the World Bank the setting up of the
United Nations the World Trade Organization were set up under American leadership
and of course a lot of things we criticize the United States for but
actually they created this uh what you might call the liberal international economic order which has sort of kept
the system going for 70 80 years and Kindleberger raises the question about what happens if you no longer have a
hegmonic power and the problem is that there is nobody then taking any
responsibility what might call the global commons. And the global commons are things we share which can't just be
dealt with by fragmented national governments. uh climate change, uh
international trade law, standard setting, um economic coordination. If
you remember back in 2008 when the world economy was in the danger of complete
collapse after the banking crisis, Gordon Brown got the leading G20
countries together led by the US and China uh and they had a common approach
to keeping the world economy afloat and they did. It's very difficult to see that happening today.
um global health in pandemics. Uh peacekeeping which has largely
disintegrated uh nuclear proliferation which is now becoming highly topical once again with
many countries that never thought of themselves as nuclear powers like Japan, Germany possibly um feeling that they
have no alternative um and humanitarian assistance. And Kindleberger's trap is what happens when
the United States declines, the Chinese are not willing to take on responsibility for many of these things.
What happens? You know, you have a complete failure of uh commonality.
But in the meantime, um we've got a competition. And I've summarized this in
a in a probably too simple a way but uh we now have competition between the two
leading superpowers. India's coming up fast but China clearly dominates
international manufacturing. Um the US still has the global currency which
gives them enormous advantages in terms of flexibility in economic policym
and technology. Um I'll show a chart on that in a moment but sort of roughly par
I would say in advanced technology uh military the US dominates I mean 600
many more bases around the world the Chinese only have two um but China's
growing rapidly in naval capacity and nuclear weapons also um and what I call
soft power most people would look I think to the United States rather than China for ideas, culture, but maybe
that's changing with the present president. And just quickly run through each of those. That gives you the
disproportion that has now arisen in manufacturing. China has more manufacturing capacity than almost all
the developed world put together. Uh certainly roughly twice as big as this
is essentially what MAGA is all about. I mean, this is what Trump has campaigned on for 20 to 30 years. How we do we
restore the United States as a manufacturing superpower because the the
Chinese are already there. This is uh more complex and I I should
say this is entirely subjective. This is these are just my estimates. There's nothing rigorous about this at all. It's
based on my reading of scientific journalism. Essentially, I've just tried to get a a sense of where I think uh we
are in terms of the big head-to-head um technological competition which is
taking place. Uh the big battle in recent years has been the the so-called chip war. Who gets access to the very
low nanometer chips which are used as the basis for all modern advanced computing and artificial intelligence?
And until six months ago, we thought the US was well ahead, mainly because it could rely on the most sophisticated
uh uh factory in the world, which is in Taiwan, as it happens. Uh but the
Chinese have demonstrated in the last few months actually that they can do an enormous amount by improvising and
working around and getting low specification chips but achieving the
same output. And that leaves into the the artificial intelligence big language
models where where there is sort of again head-to-head competition. Um and and again we thought the Americans were
ahead but deep seek and I think there have been three or four deepseek type experiences in the last few months. Um
suggests that that Chinese are probably at most only about six months behind uh
in this area. I haven't mentioned India here but India is actually now the biggest consumer of artificial
intelligence. They're not generating their own big language models but they're not rec they recognize it's
absolutely imperative and so artificial intelligence is flooding the Indian
government system and the private sector. Uh and I attempt a similar
comparison with all the major technological areas. Um it's very clear that in terms of green technology, wind,
uh uh solar power, you know, the Chinese are way way ahead of the basic
fabrication and also the supply chains. Um the Chinese are probably now well
ahead in civil nuclear power. almost all the civil nuclear plants in the world of Chinese that are being built and also in
telecoms where Huawei which we in my view foolishly uh showed the door in the UK is now got
advanced 5G 6G and they dominate standard setting in telecommunications
and quantum which I follow quite closely because my son is a quantum physicist in
California and I get a sense that that this is the next big area of
competition. and they tended to focus on different things and have a different model. The
Americans are, you know, building up their quantum capacity from the grassroots. Lots of different models.
The Chinese have one guy that they identified 30 years ago and they threw
an infinite amount of money at him and told him to develop quantum physics to
as far as he possibly could. And as far as we know, uh, they're up there. Um so
I don't want to talk through that in detail just mention advanced manufacturing which is where the Chinese are now well
ahead in terms of robotics development. It isn't just the technology but this
kind of ecology where they are able to use vast numbers of subcontractors
working in very highly flexible kind of gigtype way which is how uh Chinese
industry and services currently operate. Um but the area where the Americans of
course still have the whip hand in this competition is in currency. Uh and that
matters because the US can run large deficits, finance its budget, including
its defense budget and get other people to buy the debt uh which they issue. Um
and it doesn't matter whether you're talking about reserves or transactions. you know, dollars are always invariably
a counterparty to any international business transaction, but that's
changing. I I did this, you know, this is a few years ago. Uh but since um
Trump came to power, this is accelerating. The number of business dealings conducted in dollars is falling
now quite precipitately. Um it's not moving into RAMI the Chinese
currency because China um has exchange controls uh but basically pe central
banks and businesses are now moving out of dollars into gold um the yen
Norwegian kerno whatever um and the power of the dollar is slipping quite
radically and that in a way is probably one of the key elements in geoeconomic
competition at the moment. Now I think the key turning point in policy I I I
constructed this it's a some of the numbers are a bit approximate but uh this explains why Trump's tariffs
matter. Uh the US used to be a highly protectionist country in the days of the
civil war. You may remember it was fought largely over the south's um use
of slavery uh to operate an economy based on exporting primary commodities
and importing manufacturers mainly from the UK at that time and the north uh
wanted to protect its manufacturing industry. But in the 19th century,
tariffs gradually fell as the US manufacturing became competitive with
the exception of President McKinley who Trump regards as his great hero. Um and
by by the first world war um America had largely got rid of tariffs. We then had
the inter war period when everybody including the UK um resorted to tariff
protection to fight depression. um the Smoot Holy tariffs in the United States. But since the Second World War,
the trend has been getting rid of trade restrictions, tariffs, non-tariffs
until Trump. And that's where we are today. And it it isn't I mean tariffs of
course are just a technical instrument. There lots of different ways of managing trade including export controls. But
there is an underlying philosophy which I've seeded here. Um, and I've quoted um
George Bush senior which is I think the the kind of liberal orthodoxy of the
United States until Trump really. We don't want an America that's close to the world. But now we reject
globalization and every day that passes that message is being reinforced. The
Chinese have gone in exactly the opposite direction. Mi Tong um was entirely focused on
China, had no interest in the outside world except a spasmodic interest in
promoting revolution. But uh she has now adopted as the sort of mantra of China.
We want globalization. We want international trade. And the Chinese now want to dominate or uh set the agenda as
far as they can on international trade and the rules governing international
comments. I mean that's a vastly oversimplified picture of the world and
what's happening but I think a reasonably fair way of capturing current thinking.
Of course uh the size of the country just isn't just about economics. uh
we're all very conscious of climate change and you'll see China now accounts
for about a third of all greenhouse gas emissions. They will point out of course that historically it's nothing like that
the you know the British and others uh burnt lots of uh
stuff in the in the 19th century but but certainly as of now uh China um it is
very much number one and India is becoming number two. it isn't quite there. Both of them burn a lot of coal.
But the the paradox here is that uh these two countries are the main source
of greenhouse gas emissions. They're also the main source of the cure. Right?
Uh I think almost twothirds of all investment in renewables takes place in China. Uh India now accounts for a a
large share as well. So they are both the source of the problem and the source of the solution. uh and I don't know
whether you followed President Xi's announcement during the week on their climate objectives which
environmentalists have denounced as very inadequate. Uh but the mere fact that
the Chinese are setting out their stall as a country that believes in climate change and is taking action on it um
differentiates them very powerfully from the United States and the Chinese and the Indians
will effectively be setting the agenda at future COP meetings on climate.
Um just finally in last few minutes um I've tried to simplify what all this
means in terms of the way the world is actually being governed and uh of course
the traditionally we've had our post-war global institutions um the G20 which
until recently was the concentration of all the major developed and developing
countries decision makers but in recent years we've got this fragment mentation
or the beginning into the G7, the rich world and the so-called bricks which is
a very loosely coordinated uh group of developing countries which
don't have a great deal in common actually some of which are in dispute with each other but nonetheless it has
become the basis of international decision making in some key areas
just uh just one to two to focus on actually One is the so-called Shanghai
group. Uh you may have noticed in the press that she met Modi at a meeting a
few weeks ago and it was the Shanghai group which is essentially Asian
autocracies. It's the country it's uh plus India
and their concern is with fighting terrorism, fighting secessionists.
um um quaza. It's not quite a military alliance, nothing like that, but but it's a talking shop, but it's a signal
of their common interest. Um on the other side, you have this interesting group called the CJTP,
which is a trans-pacific group set up originally by Obama to keep the Chinese
out, but the Americans then walked away from it. Um and the Chinese want to be
members of it. Um and Britain is a member. Britain is an Asian country. You may not have noticed, but we have joined
the this Asia-Pacific group. Um, so that's a sort of crude caricature. I I
when I'd done it, I felt I was oversimplifying it. So I I had a a fresh
a fresh attempt. And although I don't expect you to follow all the little charts, um it it the point I'm trying to
make is that in in place of something that you could have called world government, you now have vast numbers of
complex networks of countries um often centering on trade. Uh for example the
rce which is all the purple dots is a um a kind of European common market in
Southeast Asia. um Meccaur which is growing integration in Latin America um
com essa is a very very basic so rather underdeveloped
integration scheme in Africa but I think the point I'm trying to make is in place
of kind of global rules and global institutions we still have a fair degree
of cooperation but it's breaking down into sort of regional and functional
groups of different kinds And lastly, I devote a chapter in the
book saying, well, if these are the two superpowers of the future, how do they relate to each other? And I think the
the one word which summarizes it, it's frenommies. You know, they have elements of
cooperation but also hostilities. I mean, they have fought wars only four or
four years ago. There were serious military clashes and indeed a few months ago there were um China
not directly but indirectly supported Pakistan through arms supplies in its
recent clash on on the border. Uh so there's a disputed border. Um the
Indians until very recently were looking at a quasi military alliance with the
west. um they're effectively they're competitive and there's a lot of
democracy and and India believes in democracy. I mean it may be compromised in some ways but it is a different value
system but they also have a lot in common you know and as we know they're both they're both by Russian oil and
they refuse to be told not to um they're very they have a common ground in
fighting Islamic fundamentalists whether they're in Kashmir or Xing Jang uh they
want the world reformed in much the same way uh they both have this idea of a
global south that they're part of as opposed to the west. They have a common position on climate. Um, and they both
have a similar sort of economic political model in many ways. So, where does all this lead? Uh, and I'll finish
on this note. Uh, I served my apprenticeship in in business in the
Shovel's scenario planning team. Um and we were taught to think about the future
in a in a disciplined way through uh scenarios which are logical and
plausible. Um they're not predictions but and the first step is to identify
some of the key uncertainties about the future. And I've just tried to summarize them. I'm sure you can think of lots of
others um but I've just put them up there. But I what I wanted to lead to is this which
are three different stories of the future. How this emergence of China and
India, its competition with the United States, um how all of this is going to play out.
You know, it a lot of it depends what happens in the Ukraine war, uh what happens in the competition around
fundamental technologies. Uh but I I sketch out three different stories of
the world and my last chapter is is trying to put flesh on these bones. Um
and the first is the idea that I think was pretty plausible before Trump came back which is that you would get this
global west. You know most of the emerging markets would realize that their interests lie predominantly with
Europe and the United States. um and that uh you get what has been
caricatures as the axis of evil or whatever uh China, Russia, Iran, Afghan,
Venezuela and so on. Um but but this is now be beginning to look very dated.
um many of the leading countries that were leaning to the western world, India
most preeminently, Brazil um are so antagonized by Trump's way of
running things uh that they are moving in a different direction. But the global
west was a I would say the the most plausible way of looking at the future
until very recently. But what's beginning to emerge is this idea of the
bricks which is separate spheres of influence around the emer big emerging
power. Um and the and in a way Trump is sort of validating this view basically
look I'm concerned about the US. I have no interest in what happens in what he rather crudely calls holes in
Africa or whatever. Whereas um the the countries which are there you know
developing their own way of doing things and you know Brazil becoming a major power in its own right, China in East
Asia, India in the subcontinent potentially. Um and this is what's sometimes called a multipolar world.
Plenty of indicators that that concept is valid. Um, the problem with it is is
what I'd earlied as the Kindleberger trap. I mean, who looks after the world? You know, you may be looking after your
region and your sphere of influence, but who looks after the world? Uh, and it's
uh actually quite a worrying scenario. And then you have what's now happening
with Trump, the the collapse of international institutions. Um what I call a vortex where
instability sort of feeds on itself and you get to some disaster. We don't know
what it is. It could be a you know major economic failure, could be a climate disaster, could be you know somebody
starting to use nuclear weapons. all kind of possibilities that if you don't have order uh and you don't have secure
alliances, you know, disaster happens. And it may be, and I want to finish on an optimistic note, it may be that out
of disaster, you you somebody designs a new multilateralism that is more fitted
to uh the new economic geography of the world. Uh but I need to finish on an
optimistic note, but uh those are, you know, three out of my head, right? I
mean you can you can look at the future in lots of different ways but those three seem to be pretty plausible uh
picture of the way the world is evolving. Well, thank you for your attention and I'm very happy to take
questions.
Firstly, thanks. Um, perhaps trying to strike an equally optimistic note, assuming America continues to have
elections, um, do we are we overemphasizing the
durability of Trump? Are we over the durability? like you know actually
does he you know shuffle off in a couple of years time maybe even after the midterms becomes less important and
something more traditionally republic well that's the that's the liberal dream isn't it that
but it's it's not happening uh for two reasons I mean one is that I mean he's
not just a maverick individual I mean he's got an immensely powerful uh emotionally driven support base,
right? It represents a movement, not just one eccentric man. Um, and the
other is, of course, that they're taking over the institutions. You know, the legal profession,
um, you know, big companies allied with the the the oligarchs in the United
States, universities being destroyed or at least undermined. Uh, and the Trump I
mean, it is a revolution that's taking place. In fact, one of the um little
jokes the Chinese have when you talk about this stuff is that um they sort of
smile knowingly and say, "Well, we understand what's happening in Trump's America. We've been there. The cultural
revolution, you know, people running around with little red books, uh putting Duncy's hat on the heads of senior
officials and university vice chancellors, and you know, we've been there. Um it is chaotic but it is a it
is genuinely revolutionary and it is taking over and it could well spread here. We we we we see all the signs. So
uh I I don't I I think the idea that people had and they still seem to have in the American Democratic Party that
all they need to do is to win a few seats in Congress and this will all be reversed. I mean just strikes me as
incredibly naive. I mean we're dealing with something much deeper.
You haven't mentioned much about Australia and New Zealand. Where do you see their Sorry, I I I left my um hearing aids at
home, so I'm asking you to be You haven't said much about Australia and New Zealand. Where do you see their
place in the world this century? Australia and New Zealand. Australia. Yes. Well, you know, Australia is is
becoming important in a kind of Asia-Pacific sense, and it's Australia's quite an
interesting country to watch because, of course, uh, you know, they're very much part of the West culturally and
traditionally, economically, but the Australians have been very canny in
realizing that the Chinese are now the dominant power in Asia. And the Chinese
did bully them. I mean a few years ago um I think the ch the Australian prime
minister had the cheek to ask what was the cause of the COVID pandemic and they
retaliated by putting sanctions on wine exports and iron ore and the Chinese
behaved very badly. Um and it was a warning about you know how badly the Chinese can behave to their neighbors.
But the the Australians realize that they have to do business with China. uh
and they've repaired their relationship, but at the same time they have a
foothold in this so-called Orcus agreement where the British uh the
Americans uh and the Australians work together on kind of submarine development. So, Australia is trying to
keep a foothold in the west partly for security reasons, but economically they
depend totally on China and they have to maintain a good relationship with them. And the New Zealanders have been even
more careful not to avoid seriously antagonizing China. Uh and that is the
perhaps the dominant theme in their foreign policy.
Um earlier you showed a slide of um a sort of multiple network scenario
replacing globalization and I think that's what the multipolar ar multipolar
arrow is about. Um, oh, that's very kind of you. Yes, there it is. There it is.
And I didn't see anywhere the Commonwealth. Yeah. And yet,
and yet during the Brexit debate, um, the Commonwealth seemed to percolate upwards as a better alternative for
Britain. So, I wondered what you felt. What is the position of the Commonwealth in the future?
Well, I I don't want in any way to belittle the Commonwealth. Well, I used to work for Sunonny Ranfell the earlier
stage of my career and had a great and the Commonwealth played a very important
historical role in resolving the issues in South Africa actually. Um but their
current network um has no economic significance whatever.
Uh very few of the Commonwealth countries have any interest in tying their economic future to the UK. Um,
India particularly is, you know, they they turn up at Commonwealth meetings, but they don't attach value to it. So,
you know, I don't want to belittle it. Um, but the the the the talk in the Brexit referendum
about reviving the common was just nostalgia. I mean, it was nothing to do with serious policy.
There's a gentleman just to your right. Thanks so much. Uh we've just heard that
you know there's a big movement in the US that uh may be irreversible or at least going to stay with us for a little
while and we already know the situation with China. What should Britain do? What
should be our place to to weather out the next 20 30 years? Well, my my view
on on this is that we should be hedging our bets um doing what the Australians do
basically and try to maintain good working relations with China and the US.
Uh above all rebuild relations with the European Union but um you know there is
a world beyond that and in the world beyond that you have to have sensible relationships with China. And I do worry
about the paranoia, you know, about Chinese students and Chinese businesses,
which I'm afraid you you encounter in Cambridge as well as other places. Uh, I
had some experience of this when I was in government. I was, as you know, business secretary for five years. And
one of my roles was developing um good relationship with inward investors in
the UK, big inward investors, one of which was Huawei in telecommunications
and Huawei had developed very close relationships
with um with the GCHQ amongst other places and they provided the kit and it
was very very carefully monitored because you know there obviously was a security risk but whenever Whenever I
asked our security people, I said, "Are you happy to be working with the Chinese?" They said, "Yes, we can manage
this." But then what happened? I I left government 2015.
Um, shortly afterwards, the question arose is, do we want the Huawei to be
leading on 5G technology? Um and there was some reservation about
it but Theresa May came up with a compromise which is basically that
Huawei can't participated in the core functions of 5G but we welcome their
role in all the peripheries and so on. Um at that point the Americans stepped
in and says no you can't. Basically we do not want Britain uh to be part of
this um emerging Chinese telecommunications infrastructure. We will not allow you to. Basically they
said we will not supply Britain with key components if you insist in working with
Huawei. And so Huawei uh wasn't just barred from 5G. they've been ripped out
of the system. You know, BT have spent the last two or three years pulling Huawei equipment out their system and as
a result, Britain has gone backwards about three or four years on key telecommunications infrastructure
standards like latency speeds and that struck me as, you know, one of the worst
decisions that we've taken in recent years. Um what defying the Americans would have
led to I don't know but but my my instincts is that we should be uh
working with the Chinese where it's sensible and safe. Um and the classic
area which is coming up is um electric vehicles and it's a difficult one
because Chinese electric vehicles are now far technologically superior and
cheaper than anything we can produce or the Europeans can produce and they want
to um dominate the industry. And I think the answer to that is to say to the
Chinese what we said to the Japanese in the days of Margaret Thatcher, you may remember, uh she encouraged them to set
up the Nissan plant in Sunderland. And so we should say to the Chinese, we're not going to buy your electric vehicles
um for cash as it were, but if you want to put factories here, and if you can
demonstrate a genuine transfer of technology to the UK, uh you're welcome.
Um that debate is is currently going on. Um but I I I I believe we should be
hedging our relationships. The US is becoming wholly unreliable
uh protectionist. Um we're being dominated by their tech companies in a
very unhealthy way. Uh and we we've got to build and also with India. India is
enormously important and less threatening in a way. Um uh but my
approach is to hedge our bets.
You mentioned the the threat to the global commons of declining America.
Um do you think it's possible to preserve and protect them and if so how? Well, it's very difficult. I mean I
don't know any how any you know Cambridge is the center of the Antarctic
project and what's happening in Antarctica is very very alarming. I mean
until very recently it was respected as a global commons. Nobody owned it. Uh
and it was seen as a place for um scientific research and polar
exploration. But what's happened in the last 10 years in China is that in in
Antarctica is that all the powers, the big powers have seized um slices of it. The Russians have
established bases uh what they call scientific bases, but they're clearly not. Uh the Chinese the same. Uh and and
India, I think, as part of Antarctica, even Saudi Arabia, I think, has gone
gone. And um and what they're doing is is is essentially mineral exploration
which is against the rules of Antarctica. Um there's a big row just
broken out about who's who who is protecting the penguins because uh the
penguin population is being hit and apart from the British and a few other
good guys uh nobody's doing their ecological duty. So I mean Antarctica is
a very good example about what happens when uh disciplines over the global commons break down. Um fortunately in
many areas uh there is a lot of effective international cooperation.
Um I and I honestly wouldn't trust the Chinese to take on all of this. I mean
President Xi has a global philosophy. He calls the global development initiative
and the global security initiative. Um but it's it's not about dominating the
world but it's making sure that the world operates according to Chinese interests. So they don't have a kind of
global view either and the Americans are walking away. Um I think I I I think the
Europe actually has a major responsibility in this area and and the kind of middle powers who can see a lot
of bad things happening and really should be working together to to stop it.
Sorry, I think we're out of time. We're out of time. Sorry. But thank you for your attention.
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