China's Population Collapse Is Terrifying - Peter Zeihan

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  • čas přidán 28. 04. 2024
  • Peter Zeihan explains China’s current demographic trends. Does Peter Zeihan think that China is heading for population collapse? Why did China’s one child policy cause so much damage? What does Peter Zeihan think about Chinese food shortages?
    #peterzeihan #china #population
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Komentáře • 3,3K

  • @ChrisWillx
    @ChrisWillx  Před rokem +99

    Watch the full episode here - czcams.com/video/wRT7P-VKM0k/video.html

    • @gregorywitcher5618
      @gregorywitcher5618 Před rokem

      As a former USAF Intel I assess China did not want another Mao in the history books so they used Tom Hanks disease to do the job and distract from the job being done. They are vengeful of the US influenced one child policy. Don’t forget that. Anywho, Chris, I am your ILR Witcher. Sidebar?

    • @randyross5630
      @randyross5630 Před rokem +4

      China says their Birth Rate is slightly over 1 (2.1 needed to sustain the Population) but I'm not even sure of that, in theory China could have 4 kids per couple and be heading out of this in 20 years, although dealing with Population issues for 20 years and x amount after, however, it's incredibly doubtful China will even get to 2.1 unless the do it at literally Gun Point, and I don't see that happening, so when we say China's going to be cut in half Population wise by this Date, but there Population is set to Keep Collasping till the come out the other end, than add the Death Spiral to the Economy it could compound that further! We are talking a Complete Collaspe of Society, it's possible China gets under 300 Million by the End of this Century, it's possible.. and a left behind toxic and crumbling waste land, a cautionary tale, expect their Higher Ups Know This, and they'd be more than happy to take US all down with them given the chance, and trying to overrun South East Asia to try to Stave that off, no matter how futile, could be what they see as their way out of This. Wars on the Table!

    • @randyross5630
      @randyross5630 Před rokem

      What everyone leaves out about Fertilizer or Food Issues, or Energy Issues is it's not our Problem besides the Price being x amount inflated, but not as high as other places for x Reasons and we have more money to deal with our lower costs compared to them. We are the World's Largest Food Producer and Exporter, We make enough Fertilizer for US and can export some because of such, because we have the most energy in the World Surrounding US and inside US, and when you compare pipe lines to shipping it across seas, most of that Cheap Energy is for US, and compared to everyone else, it will be cheaper! Because we use our Soft Power already to ensure our Prices are lower here than other places, like compare gas prices here to Europe before, point proven. But people frame all this as Dynamics held against US, However all these Dynamics are why we are going to Remain #1 and all our Enemies are Throwing a Fit while they can before it's all to obvious! We got to make it through this Decade without Civil War, and we literally got the 21st Century!

    • @seymorefact4333
      @seymorefact4333 Před rokem

      ☣☣☣🇪🇺🇬🇧🇺🇸☣☣☣ don't worry about China.... USA has a population collapse for 30yrs now. More dead whites than being born. Plus, life expectancy for whites has been in decline for 20yrs, shorter than China. Increase white Male suicides has drastically increases. Only Hispanic coming to USA is increasing. Soon your channel will be in espanol! United states of Mexico
      India your employer.....is growing... but, they know it is a burden on their country. 80% illiteracy rates, most newborns are from rapes. Largest democracy is also largest corruption! Not to mention it's the west new dumping ground for pollution and slave labor.

    • @cheesypuffs1342
      @cheesypuffs1342 Před rokem +4

      not interested. peter seems clueless
      male to female sex ratio by country (25~50 year old category)
      china 1.05
      India 1.07
      Kosovo 1.12
      Oman 1.33
      Saudi Arabia 1.52
      Kuwait 1.69
      Bahrain 1.87
      UAE 3.27

  • @j.davidsemple6988
    @j.davidsemple6988 Před rokem +322

    I worked in Beijing, China from 2004 to 2008. Every week couples flew in from North America and Europe and took home Chinese infants that they were adopting - almost all girls. Those little babies would be 14 to 19 years old now. Amazing that even that recently the Chinese did not see the problems that they were creating.

    • @vicky4812
      @vicky4812 Před 10 měsíci +130

      As a Chinese girl,I’m happy they got good family,China abandoned them and doesn’t deserve them

    • @tomc3216
      @tomc3216 Před 10 měsíci +47

      @@vitaboostand my buddies nieces best friend was adopted from China and goes to a great university and has opportunities she never would have had which is the norm.

    • @davidradtke160
      @davidradtke160 Před 10 měsíci

      Good for the rest of the world bad for China.

    • @user-jy5qm8nc9m
      @user-jy5qm8nc9m Před 8 měsíci

      Adoption is a drop in the bucket, that's not really the problem

    • @killbot86
      @killbot86 Před 3 měsíci +26

      The CCP isn’t forward thinking but rather is very short-sighted, and this is due to their big desire for immediate results…Things that they can show off quickly….They wanted to eliminate poverty quickly and slowing population growth using the one child policy is an example of this. Also the property bubble. They funded massive construction projects simply to boost GDP numbers even though it inflated the property bubble, but they preferred to kick the can down the road so long as the immediate results made them look good…..

  • @BC-vg3zf
    @BC-vg3zf Před rokem +167

    West Aussie farmer here. Great talk here about food and fertiliser. 12 months ago a particular fertiliser blend I use cost $750 a ton same blend cost over$1300 a ton this year

    • @franklycoolz
      @franklycoolz Před rokem +8

      Sorry to hear that, crazy economy. Good luck to you.

    • @RenegadeRanga
      @RenegadeRanga Před rokem +13

      Manufactured chaos mate

    • @franklycoolz
      @franklycoolz Před rokem +9

      @@RenegadeRanga yeah, I thought the same. There’s no way it’s incompetence, too deliberate to be stupidity.

    • @saddysly8281
      @saddysly8281 Před rokem +7

      We need to produce fertiliser here. In the same boat farmer in NSW.

    • @ernieb820
      @ernieb820 Před rokem

      What Brand of fertilizer do you use?

  • @Barbara0015
    @Barbara0015 Před 6 měsíci +424

    Great video! According to certain economists, there are projections indicating the possibility of the United States and certain parts of Europe experiencing a recession during a portion of 2023. While a global recession, which refers to a decline in annual global per capita income, is relatively uncommon due to the faster growth rates of China and emerging markets compared to developed economies, it is important to note that if economic growth lags behind population growth, the world economy is generally regarded as being in a recession.

    • @Hoffmanluiz.
      @Hoffmanluiz. Před 6 měsíci

      My primary concern at the moment is finding ways to generate additional revenue during challenging economic times. I cannot afford to witness my savings diminish to nothing.

    • @williamsdavis.
      @williamsdavis. Před 6 měsíci

      Exactly! Which is why I appreciate giving a financial advisor the power of decision making. Giving their specialized expertise and education, as well as the fact that each and every one of their skills is centered on harnessing risks for its asymmetrical potential and controlling it as a buffer against certain unfavorable developments, it’s practically impossible for them to underperform. I have made over $1.5millions working with John Desmond Heppolette, for more than five years.

    • @Hoffmanluiz.
      @Hoffmanluiz. Před 6 měsíci

      Thanks for the information! He really seem to know this stuff. I found his web-page when I made a google search of his full names, read through his resume, educational background, qualifications and it was really impressive. I left him a note and booked a call session with him..

    • @linsey.
      @linsey. Před 6 měsíci

      To succeed the financial market, you must review and put into consideration the dynamics of your assets prior investing. Analysis based on research is vital which is why I recommend investing with a financial advisor if you don’t know the basics.

    • @dplocksmith91
      @dplocksmith91 Před 3 měsíci +1

      It's 2024 and no recession yet

  • @anthonyarlington438
    @anthonyarlington438 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Great conversation

  • @disgruntledtoons
    @disgruntledtoons Před rokem +661

    The Chinese were able to do in one generation what the British did in seven generations because six generations of British had to discover things for the first time. China had the luxury of adopting practices that other peoples had already discovered. And if you have an authoritarian government you can impose those practices on a culture that never would have discovered them on its own.

    • @laurencew5220
      @laurencew5220 Před rokem +21

      Did you know that most of leonardo's idea's likely came from china

    • @gondwanandreams7635
      @gondwanandreams7635 Před rokem +86

      @@laurencew5220 Just no.

    • @johnwright9372
      @johnwright9372 Před rokem +66

      @@laurencew5220 Er, no they didn't.

    • @swissbiggy
      @swissbiggy Před rokem +95

      Dude China was already a developed nation when Eurpoe was still living in the middle ages. Europeans did learn most of what they know from the people in the far east and from the Arab's. If you don't know shit about history, it's maybe not such a good idea to post comments.
      Maybe read a few history books before posting.

    • @leapdrive
      @leapdrive Před rokem

      @@swissbiggy , everything you know about China being so great in the past was all propagated by Western Communists. Ancient China was all about tribal wars.

  • @kennztube
    @kennztube Před rokem +765

    This was without doubt one of the most fascinating and informative interviews ive seen in some time.

    • @yourchannel4659
      @yourchannel4659 Před rokem +30

      Everyone remembers their first Peter Zeihan lecture

    • @fool9111z
      @fool9111z Před rokem +11

      Yes the most awful and wrong analysis. Look up Nathan Rich on Zeihan to understand Zeihan.

    • @TexanIndependence
      @TexanIndependence Před rokem +1

      Wishful thinking, it seems Zeihan has it backwards. I've looked at Chinese census data, and if anything, they are finding it's better than expected, for example China just "discovered" 12 million extra children born between 2000 and 2010, most of whom were girls. Why? One child policy made them HIDE their extra girl children so they can try again for a boy. Zeihan's odd 100 million overcounting claim is such that he is saying people had girls, reported their births, then killed them. Uhhh, no. While yes many Chinese did abort their girls, they did it before they reported them as births (either aborted during pregnancy or infanticide usually right after birth and finding out it wasn't a boy, sadly, I've seen abandoned baby girl carcases thrown in the refuse in China like it was just garbage, quite traumatizing to see). They don't keep the girl, report it to the government and keep it for a while, they'd get attached. They almost always get rid of it immediately, before they can get attached. No woman is going to breastfeed a baby they intend to murder and they didn't have formula back then. What DID happen is many mothers HID the births of their first girl or first boy even, so they could have their first son or even a second child.
      So China's demography actually is better than expected, in 2016 after the one child policy was lifted, demographers began discovering that there were anywhere from 30 million to 60 million hidden girls in China born from 1980 to 2010, which is good news for China. There is no way of knowing the true number of how many millions of girls went missing unless they get discovered or self-report as many of them have lived for decades using false identities (i.e. borrowing a sibling or cousin's ID whenever they need ID, living with another identity, living offgrid, etc.). I personally know of a few Chinese who have mislead society/govt on their birth origins.
      Also, Zeihan is clearly wrong about which countries are the worst fertility rates. The worst country in the world is South Korea who has a fertility rate of 0.8, which is about 1/3rd of the replacement rate, they are shrinking by 2/3rds in the next 30-40 years.
      What Zeihan said about China is actually more applicable to South Korea. In 20 years, South Korea's military will shrink by 2/3rds. Meanwhile North Korea more than double the birth rate and is actively trying to increase their birth rate (now that they know they could beat South Korea in 25 to 40 years if they just increase their birth rate).
      So while Japan and South Korea implode (and ripple effects hit the West ontop of Europe's decline), America itself is not one of the best demographics, if you remove the importation of foreigners (and it's debatable whether a 400 million United States of Mexico in 2050 will be as effective as a 250 million America of the 1990's, you can't just replace the entire population and culture and expect that entity to be just as efficient and stable).
      Already, the mass importation of H1B workers is causing hugely destabilizing effects in the USA, one of which is about to be felt in real estate. San Francisco/Silicon Valley are starting to see home prices decline over 20% in the past 2 months as IT sector started layoffs, and there is a real question if the millions of H1B's, for example Indians, less than 20% of whom had citizenship back in 2008, now over 60% of them have gotten citizenship, are they going to stick around in a 8.5% inflation USA with 2% GDP growth? Or head back to India which has 7.0% inflation and 7.3% growth, yes you read that right. India has less inflation than America. What a joke America is now! I remember many of my indian friends one of their complaints about India when moving to America was how it's economy was unstable with high inflation, but now India has less inflation and more growth/stability than the American economy.
      So if America lays off 2 million Indian IT workers during a recession, now that they have citizenship they have no reason to stick around and be jobless during an economic slowdown in the USA, when they could take their millions back to India's booming economy and live like kings. The fewer millions who were here in 2008 did not have citizenship yet so they toughed out the storm in order to get citizenship. Same is true of other H1B and other economic migrants. If things here get worse than 2008 levels, then even Illegals may go back to Mexico if the jobs dry up here which would in turn cause rental vacancies to skyrocket. It could be a domino effect. So imagine millions of houses spilling onto the market.
      Importing tens of millions of people who are economic migrants with no loyalty to the nation, and who could easily return home (they are not slaves, and most have family in their home countries they'd like to go back to see) is a recipe for disaster if we face another Great Recession worse than 2008 (even if it doesn't reach Great Depression levels, if it does, then we're screwed). There can be a domino effect. If a million Indian H1B workers leave, they leave 1 million houses on the market, collapsing real estate dramatically (even 1% of American houses spilling on the market at the same time can lead to a 50% decline in home values if there isn't enough demand). Add onto that fact that many people in houses or apartments may move back in with their parents at a rate never seen before in history, and then if that domino gets too out of hand even the hired help/illegals may decide to bail (and then free up millions of apartments and rental homes, causing rents to plummet). And since most of America's wealth is tied up in their real estate values, it's basically game over for the USA.
      Meanwhile, in China, if demographics is such a problem, 2 years ago they implemented 3 child policy, and this past year they lifted all population restrictions. Next step will be possibly incentives, but China has noted that incentives didn't work in the west, so they may actually start taxing/punishing unmarried, childless adults. They banned video games except for 1 hour on Saturdays, and then banned boy bands and other male models to masculinize their society and remove unrealistic expectations of women in who they mate with. And now some Chinese provincial governments are starting to mandate attendance at dating events for unmarried young adults. China can deal with this problem because it's not subject to voter backlash like the USA is. It can just mandate away feminism and mandate marriage and births.

    • @carlosreid51
      @carlosreid51 Před rokem +3

      This is why mainstream media collapsing and good podcast shows are the old television as knowledge

    • @Smuddpie
      @Smuddpie Před rokem

      @@fool9111z Nathan Rich is a CCP shill.

  • @rafaelmarquez5916
    @rafaelmarquez5916 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Good show thank you, very informative.

  • @parkerking5521
    @parkerking5521 Před rokem +1

    fascinating conversation

  • @mychannelforlisteningtomus495

    I'm not sure what to think about this guy.
    He's well-spoken and very confident, which makes it easy to believe him. He knows a lot about the things he talks about, or at least appears to.
    I've also seen him be horrendously off base, while continuing to speak with the same kind of confidence.
    I dunno. He's absolutely a pleasure to listen to, but I feel the need to take him with a large grain of salt.

    • @immortaljanus
      @immortaljanus Před rokem +24

      Example, please.

    • @repCanada
      @repCanada Před rokem +74

      I've heard some complete bullshit come out of his mouth. The thing is unless you are well versed in the topics being discussed you won't have any way of realizing how wrong he is

    • @patrickhall6627
      @patrickhall6627 Před rokem +156

      This is exactly the kind of comment to take with a large grain of salt. Made no argument, cited nothing, merely made claims.

    • @anthonyreed480
      @anthonyreed480 Před rokem +52

      @@repCanada Demographics are what they are, and he's not wrong about China.

    • @veronicavv7188
      @veronicavv7188 Před rokem

      Agree, this guy is bullshiting. Why would China need to expand when the population shrinks? It’s a big country, china’s own land can support a smaller population for sure

  • @themore-you-know
    @themore-you-know Před rokem +375

    Damn, I knew the population situation in China was really bad...
    ... but I had somehow managed to forget rule number 1: always multiply by "worst case scenario to account for unreliable data".

    • @protorhinocerator142
      @protorhinocerator142 Před rokem +66

      The more secretive they are about the data, the more you should suspect the worst, or even worse than that.

    • @taylorc2542
      @taylorc2542 Před rokem +98

      It's even worse in Europe, but not in a raw numbers sense. It's really about who is having kids, and it's...um...not people native to Europe.

    • @vampireducks1622
      @vampireducks1622 Před rokem +26

      @@taylorc2542 It makes no difference to the sustainability of European economies whether they are "native to Europe" or not (if anything, migrant workers tend to be more productive than natives). But if your concern is more "cultural" than anything else (i.e. filtered though a prism of more or less racist assumptions and prejudices), then I suppose it matters quite a lot.

    • @jackpotbear4559
      @jackpotbear4559 Před rokem +47

      It does make a difference, just ask Ukraine. Russian immigrants who immigrated during Soviet times have now risen up and taken quarter of the country with the help of their home country.
      Russians didn't become Ukrainian and nor will non Europeans become European.

    • @ab-gu2nh
      @ab-gu2nh Před rokem +37

      @@vampireducks1622 You got a source on that claim that says migrant workers are more productive ?
      Immigration can be a net economic benefit, if its controlled over time. Where you can pick Iranian nuclear scientists which is more productive than average native. But is it comparable to the millions of migrants, with little to no secondary education, dont know the language of which they migrate ? Have to spend alot of money for them to even be productive.
      Which also is true with natives, but I dont see how you can say they are productive.

  • @carrieannmcleod5219
    @carrieannmcleod5219 Před rokem +3

    Very interesting and informative. Thank you.

  • @rafaelmarquez5916
    @rafaelmarquez5916 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Great information, it really changes my understanding perception of social changes based on advancement and social polices.

  • @tizzy6
    @tizzy6 Před rokem +84

    Keep up the content man, great volley of conversation. You are well on your way to the top

  • @darbyheavey406
    @darbyheavey406 Před rokem +92

    Peter Drucker predicted the demographic challenge faced by China in 1988.

    • @Painfulwhale360
      @Painfulwhale360 Před rokem

      Well, it’s pretty easy to know that when a nation limits the amount of children you can have and the majority of babies that were born were males, your population will collapse later down the road.

  • @ChrisRed6
    @ChrisRed6 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Nice knowledge, thank you Chris

  • @stevenhamblin6067
    @stevenhamblin6067 Před 3 měsíci +7

    Years ago I went to China and observed an 80 year old woman working in the factory I was going to do business with. Don't you think that will happen to all their workers, they simply won't be able to retire. They will end up working until they are unable to.

    • @user-co5mp3tm2z
      @user-co5mp3tm2z Před měsícem

      I am Chinese with ALLthe people I know of ALL retired early to give their posts to their kids

    • @tobinsarttrading1733
      @tobinsarttrading1733 Před měsícem

      Yes I think in the future they will have jobs if they choose! But in recent times they have not generally had to work!

  • @davideaston6944
    @davideaston6944 Před rokem +4

    I did enjoy that, I will clink the link to the full version, and I have subscribed! Appreciated the content, you seemed to ask poignant, directed questions, and your guest was wonderfully articulate. Thanks! First time caller, AND never listed before, but if more of your content is the same, I look forward to be a subscriber - Cheers (AND shared!)

  • @Stardusted1
    @Stardusted1 Před rokem +30

    I just found your channel by accident. I’ve already forwarded this interview to all my family. I’m subscribed and eager to see more! Thank you.

    • @31869
      @31869 Před 3 měsíci

      The Comedy Channel

  • @peterharris38
    @peterharris38 Před měsícem

    This was an excellent conversation 😊

  • @ninesfm6817
    @ninesfm6817 Před rokem +1

    Thank you,,,

  • @robertturner5848
    @robertturner5848 Před rokem +3

    Brilliant expositiom. Left me breathless.

  • @siggyincr7447
    @siggyincr7447 Před rokem +457

    Never heard of this guy before. Gonna have to listen to the rest of the interview later. The upsidedown demographics in industrialized nations is already a well established phenomena. Turns out population growth isn't gonna be a problem so much as finding ways to motivate successful young adults to have families.

    • @AUniqueHandleName444
      @AUniqueHandleName444 Před rokem +61

      And more specifically successful young women.

    • @doomedbook1020
      @doomedbook1020 Před rokem +22

      @@AUniqueHandleName444 successful young women and childless aren't mutually exclusive.

    • @pmmw8468
      @pmmw8468 Před rokem +14

      And Americans wanting to work for 65 yrs. Like my children and my father working in a coal mine.

    • @siggyincr7447
      @siggyincr7447 Před rokem +42

      @@doomedbook1020 No, but there is a inverse relationship between income levels and number of children for women. And high income levels are also a negative predictor for long term marital success for women as well.

    • @siggyincr7447
      @siggyincr7447 Před rokem

      @@pmmw8468 not sure what you mean. Do you mean that working till you're 65 is a problem for industrialized nations?

  • @aabosala
    @aabosala Před 10 měsíci

    Keep dearming my wee lad !!!

  • @kaushikofficial
    @kaushikofficial Před rokem +2

    The face at 0.48...thats beyond wild!! 😄

  • @Ingeb91
    @Ingeb91 Před rokem +40

    I'm glad you made this clip. It's nice to have something to show to when I explain to people that the current view on the world is a bit shallow.

  • @jayehum5019
    @jayehum5019 Před rokem +70

    Peter is spot on about Western Australia 'not having soil in the way we think of the term'. This is the most fascinating (and frightening) interview I've listened to in ages. Thank you.

    • @UpliftedCapybara
      @UpliftedCapybara Před rokem +2

      What is the soil like then?

    • @chriswatson1698
      @chriswatson1698 Před rokem +3

      So how come WA exports so much grain? Another bumper crop this year.

    • @shamicentertainment1262
      @shamicentertainment1262 Před rokem +4

      @@UpliftedCapybara i think it's just sand. i live there and basically every is just sand lol. that being said it's a massive state i might be wrong in some areas maybe there is good soil. western australia is geologically very old, so for reasons ive forgotten means we don't have fertile soil.

    • @chriswatson1698
      @chriswatson1698 Před rokem +3

      @@shamicentertainment1262 We have to add trace elements. Farmland all over the world gets fertilized.
      Perth's coastal plain is mostly sand, but east of the escarpment it is different. More clay in it.

    • @PaulBKal
      @PaulBKal Před rokem +6

      No what he’s talking about is the need for phosphate fertilizer in WA. It’s not that WA doesn’t have soil per se, it’s more that it’s phosphate hungry, and phosphate is in very short supply at present. As to the nature of WA soils, on the coastal plains, they are very sandy but there are generally better loams inland, however the sandy soils with increased humus and organic matter have become incredibly productive. WA’s agricultural production, especially grains has gone through the stratosphere in recent decades from around 7 million tonnes in the 1980’s to over 25 million tonnes in 2022, largely due to minimum till techniques conserving soil moisture and greatly improving soil structures, and far better weed control from glyphosate and post emergent selective weedicide chemicals.

  • @lindabrennan4455
    @lindabrennan4455 Před měsícem

    Excellent interview. ❤

  • @Annette64772
    @Annette64772 Před 11 měsíci

    Wow thank you knowledge is wisdom. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @xMalfiasx
    @xMalfiasx Před rokem +17

    My friend just told me about this. I just can’t believe that. Its insane.

    • @BlueBobbin
      @BlueBobbin Před 10 měsíci

      It actually makes sense. Abortions, young people getting married later, women avoiding pregnancy via contraception- this has consequences

    • @BigL.10
      @BigL.10 Před 2 měsíci

      @@BlueBobbinthose are such minor factors, apart from having later marriages. But even that comes down to the massively higher cost of living today, couples cannot afford to raise a child.

  • @XcessCapital
    @XcessCapital Před rokem +135

    2 things. First, thank you for this great interview Chris. Also, I love seeing the progression in your channel. You have quickly moved up my "must listen" list. You're up there with Rogan, Fridman, Ferriss for me now. Keep up the great work. Very interesting stuff.

    • @ashleyalexander7388
      @ashleyalexander7388 Před rokem

      yh, there's more i want to listen to :)

    • @mrjpb23
      @mrjpb23 Před rokem +5

      I’m not sure long form interviews like this that only present one viewpoint are terribly informative for people who aren’t already familiar with the specific discipline/field being discussed. Especially not when the subject speaks so confidently, making it seem as if their analysis is simply objective fact. It can lead viewers who aren’t familiar with counter-narratives and associated evidence to draw the wrong conclusions.

    • @pmmw8468
      @pmmw8468 Před rokem +5

      @@lorrie1397I don't agree. Like his voice and speech

    • @kyhxx
      @kyhxx Před rokem

      . nod his progression n unique guests ovrtime= a dlght ^

    • @nathanielbyrne1132
      @nathanielbyrne1132 Před měsícem

      Yeah Chris is very level headed

  • @ValenHawk
    @ValenHawk Před měsícem

    Excellent analysis and info.

  • @simonconway5488
    @simonconway5488 Před rokem +3

    That was one of best interviews I’ve heard and I watch a lot.

  • @Zorlof
    @Zorlof Před rokem +24

    Having Peter on your episode will boost your subscriptions. I subscribed after viewing your channel. ... and gave you a well deserved like.

  • @SuzySuziko
    @SuzySuziko Před rokem +6

    This was so excellent! (thumbs up/subscribed and bookmarked) ... which is something I very rarely do. Keep up the good work please :)

  • @richardmurray415
    @richardmurray415 Před rokem

    Proper analyst

  • @MLB9000
    @MLB9000 Před rokem +1

    We are currently seeing the effects of the fertiliser shortage in the UK with all foodstuffs that depend on feed and fertiliser going up by about 60% in a year for some products.

  • @koopon3900
    @koopon3900 Před rokem +3

    Absolutely fascinating

  • @lancemillward1912
    @lancemillward1912 Před rokem +13

    new zealand has leveraged off its clean and green reputation for a long time but the reality in terms of loss of tree canopy, loss of soils, pollution and water quality paints a very different picture.

  • @Silsoe123
    @Silsoe123 Před 3 měsíci +2

    What is the confidence rating and what is the rate of decline. How have these figures being calculated. How do different models compare.

  • @ellajo99
    @ellajo99 Před 2 měsíci

    well that was insightful.

  • @kmoustakas
    @kmoustakas Před rokem +3

    Very informative, thank you

  • @echohunter4199
    @echohunter4199 Před rokem +12

    Very well done interview sir. Thank you for the education.

  • @ELEKTROGOWK
    @ELEKTROGOWK Před rokem +9

    According to an estimate by the National Bureau of Statistics of China, the average age of the population in 2020 was 44.7 years. By 2050, it is estimated that about one-quarter of the population will be over 65 years old.
    Similarly to other parts of the world, aging in China will also result in challenges for the healthcare system and the economy. It is important that China takes measures to address the impacts of aging, including promoting health and well-being in old age, supporting older people in work, and promoting innovative solutions for caring for and supporting older people.

    • @lakeozarkrei3767
      @lakeozarkrei3767 Před 2 měsíci

      Unfortunately that's a rosier prediction then most leading experts. And that's in a 25 year context.
      By 2100 China's population is expected to be around 580 million people... unsustainable for a country China's size.

  • @eastafricanist9156
    @eastafricanist9156 Před 8 měsíci

    Amazing how much this man knows

  • @makokx7063
    @makokx7063 Před rokem +95

    The agriculture thing is terrifying, especially considering someone is going around and burning down food processing plants.

    • @hananokuni2580
      @hananokuni2580 Před rokem +10

      Can you say manufactured crisis?

    • @xidaq4998
      @xidaq4998 Před rokem +2

      Is that a reference to Ukraine Russia? Or where are they being burned?

    • @orlock20
      @orlock20 Před rokem +8

      @@xidaq4998 It's happening all over, but seems that China is getting the brunt of the damage. I believe the issue is the same all over. Standards are lowered to keep food prices competitive. This includes safety devices such as fire suppression systems, not repairing barely functioning equipment and no safety training such as fire drills.

    • @sitdowndogbreath
      @sitdowndogbreath Před rokem +1

      @@orlock20 freaking sad man.

    • @chriswatson1698
      @chriswatson1698 Před rokem +5

      If China can shrink its population enough, the Chinese may well become self-sufficient in food.

  • @chrisf5841
    @chrisf5841 Před rokem +4

    Amazing and fascinating insights!

  • @johnwilliams4545
    @johnwilliams4545 Před měsícem +7

    I refuse to accept that less people as 'terrifying'. It'll be different, but different economics is not something to be afraid of. It will never lead to zero, that's ludicrous.

    • @rayf6126
      @rayf6126 Před měsícem +1

      I keep saying it will change some societies and cause people to move and intermingle. The human race will just adjust in the same way it has before through out history.

    • @TheEggroll4321
      @TheEggroll4321 Před měsícem

      Look up the universe 25 experiment... it leads to 0

    • @johnwilliams4545
      @johnwilliams4545 Před měsícem

      @@TheEggroll4321 Modelling? Like COVID modelling or climate modelling? You can only believe it could lead to zero if you ignore anything that humans are or what they do.

  • @mgomez00
    @mgomez00 Před rokem +13

    A few months ago I found this guy in youtube and I was impressed by his "predictions".
    As time went by it became clear that none of his catastrophic visions (supported by "very serious reports and research") were even close to reality,
    FInally I got to one conclusion that has become a very accurate rule ever since: If Peter Zeihan says it, then believe the opposite and you'll get to the truth

  • @stevecam724
    @stevecam724 Před rokem +4

    Thanks for the video, really shines the light on the world around me.

  • @mcjon77
    @mcjon77 Před rokem +38

    It's fascinating that for decades we've been told that population growth would lead to the downfall of countries and even the planet. Now it looks like what's going to take out major powers will be population decline

    • @chriswatson1698
      @chriswatson1698 Před rokem

      Population shrinkage isn't a decline. Unless you are a capitalist who wants to gobble up the earth's resources at an ever faster and faster rate.

    • @colbalt95
      @colbalt95 Před rokem +2

      The Bible knows. Ittl go down like the mouse eutopia experiment.

    • @siewmj1
      @siewmj1 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Not really, if the population decline is steady. It is fine. To build a strong modern military, it is not population but money and cashflow.

    • @SC-sn3xs
      @SC-sn3xs Před 10 měsíci

      I don’t feel bad for the Chinese government they killed millions of girls and now the very thing they wanted to get rid of they realize they need for the survival of the entire country. They made their bed they need to lie in it!

    • @liangyuaq-qoyunlu407
      @liangyuaq-qoyunlu407 Před 8 měsíci +3

      nonsensical theory, almost all rural chinese family have 2-3 children. Years back, most rural chinese families don't actually report their 2nd, 3rd, or 4th child.

  • @jdickson242
    @jdickson242 Před rokem

    People dont realise the nightmare situation we are facing with agriculture. In the UK a lot of farmers used reserve fertiliser and used fields on new rotations. We are going to see reduced outputs or substantially higher costs this year and onwards... Eek

  • @generatie
    @generatie Před 2 měsíci

    What an interesting discussion!

  • @vuchaser99
    @vuchaser99 Před rokem +38

    Fantastic analysis! Reasonable, measured, thoughtful. Something you don't see much with analysts trying to drive a talking point. Sure, there is a talking point, but he has it backed up... very little conjecture. Look forward to seeing the rest.

    • @bravado7
      @bravado7 Před rokem +2

      at 9:27 he says it's difficult getting good information from China - except this guy of course
      at 12:00 he says that China will have a food collapse - if only you could, instead of starving, say, import food from countries such as Russia or Ukraine. Plenty of countries already do that, and I imagine China has more purchasing power than many of the other food importers. But his conclusion is that China needs to invade India, Vietnam, etc. 12:30 Taiwan and Japan could go nuclear in a month so that just leaves Russia (which presumably can not go nuclear in a month) - sounds totally moronic to me.
      Also, the argument that you need space to grow your population... Palestine is doing a good job of growing their population and population density despite very little land

    • @mikecarlton9000
      @mikecarlton9000 Před rokem

      @ bravado7
      It always boggles my mind when people also say Africa is overpopulated.

    • @bravado7
      @bravado7 Před rokem +1

      @@mikecarlton9000 People say the dumbest things.
      Also, maps are not really accurate in that if you want to turn a ball into a cylinder, you need to shrink locations in the middle (Africa) and expand places on the end (Greenland, Russia, and Antarctica)
      Africa is the second largest continent in the world. It also has the second largest population in the world.

    • @scooter3000gt
      @scooter3000gt Před 7 měsíci

      @@mikecarlton9000it is all relative to the food supply. Did you ever see the Sam Kinison skit about people living in the middle of the desert?

  • @dillongreaves9452
    @dillongreaves9452 Před rokem +29

    The irony is he mentioned New Zealand and yet it’s missing of the map behind him 🤣🇳🇿

    • @waynerussell6401
      @waynerussell6401 Před rokem +3

      Also in top 20 countries with the most population percentage in only one city (2019 a third of population)... so not so spread out.

    • @dashroodle9507
      @dashroodle9507 Před rokem

      Yes, that fantastically accurate map.

    • @maam-yj8ph
      @maam-yj8ph Před rokem

      The map is also irritating me and I am not very good at geography.

    • @tonylittle3508
      @tonylittle3508 Před 3 měsíci

      Also means that 2/3rds of the population is very spread out. But it seems to me that much of the population increase is immigration, and Auckland is heading to 1/3 Asian, 1/3 Pacific Islander/Maori, and 1/3rd European.

  • @makeitcount2985
    @makeitcount2985 Před 21 dnem

    I agree with you about agriculture and of the opinion that we need to move to hydroponic farming

  • @johnholland1308
    @johnholland1308 Před 10 měsíci +27

    I am skeptical. In Europe after the plague decimated the population we got the renaissance. There was more wealth per person. China may benefit from a smaller population.

    • @rebekahmontesdeoca565
      @rebekahmontesdeoca565 Před měsícem

      Yeah but the plague killed off the elderly, China's going to be majority elderly people which is something else entirely. It will put a huge burden on the few young people so how will they be able to benefit from it?

    • @shootermcgavin991
      @shootermcgavin991 Před měsícem +5

      Plague to renaissance was 200 years though

    • @jackbuendgen389
      @jackbuendgen389 Před měsícem

      Here's china's problem. The primary way the country makes money is by making everyone's stuff. A "good" work schedule for the average Chinaman is 6 12's, meaning 6 12 hour days. Well when HALF of the country is retired the only way to pump out more manufacturing goods is either to get more efficient or hire more people. Theoretically they're already efficient AND working their people to the bone BUT they're not having kids. It's obscenely expensive to live in China and every woman remembers how they were treated by the one child policy.
      Having a small population works well for countries like Japan because they make their money by innovating new technology. China is going to have to get used to the thought of making half of their GDP because they'll only have half their labor pool they have now.

    • @leegalen8383
      @leegalen8383 Před měsícem +6

      Except that they only wanted boys. Severe shortage of women and with modernization, they aren't in any hurry to marry.

  • @johnwilliams5838
    @johnwilliams5838 Před rokem +6

    This stuff is soo interesting.

  • @joannacallaghan4550
    @joannacallaghan4550 Před rokem +3

    Thank you Peter I always learn so much with you.

  • @teams3345
    @teams3345 Před 3 měsíci

    Peter is so intelligent. I could listen to his knowledge for hours. I would love his information specifically on the U.S.

  • @williammore558
    @williammore558 Před 3 měsíci

    A fascinating interview and a perspective that many, including myself, haven't considered. What's predicted may not necessarily happen because variables can change but it does highlight the dangers lurking in the background. It must be beared in mind that food will become an extremely important resource and weapon.

    • @wout123100
      @wout123100 Před 3 měsíci

      how do you know what he says is true???? you need to take these youtubevids with a lot of salt nowadays.

  • @davidsigurthorsson7832
    @davidsigurthorsson7832 Před rokem +9

    One of the most informative interviews I´ve seen in years - and I follow Pinker, Harari, Shermer and more closely!

    • @darthcrowley5561
      @darthcrowley5561 Před 2 měsíci

      Should also follow Joe rogan and you have the hole package 👊
      Have a great weekend!

  • @RezaMehr
    @RezaMehr Před rokem +4

    Chirs's face at 0:49 is priceless!

  • @jacktoy3032
    @jacktoy3032 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Chinese seniors do not have a social safety net to fall back on. Every couple is supporting their elderly parents on both side--the husband's and the wife's.
    Land for agriculture in China have been reduced due to uncontrolled pollution. One has to even question the health safety of any Chinese agricultural product.

  • @mojojoji5493
    @mojojoji5493 Před rokem

    He said it first

  • @33Donner77
    @33Donner77 Před rokem +174

    Overcounted by 100 million people, 2/3 probably would have been girls (who may have been drown in buckets in rural areas so the parents could try again for a son). Populations collapsed more dramatically during the Medieval Black Death, weakening the ruling class warlords and strengthening a merchant class that led to the Renaissance. What will our Renaissance moment be?

    • @axelfury3189
      @axelfury3189 Před rokem +25

      Except the black death affected the entire world, every society become drastically different, so its gonna be less Western Renaissance, more American Indian style civilizational collapse

    • @patriciavandevelde5469
      @patriciavandevelde5469 Před rokem +4

      How billion people how many billion and all the Indians starving to death?????????

    • @backintimealwyn5736
      @backintimealwyn5736 Před rokem

      to the black plague succeded a tremendous economic growth, ressources were plentyful , land was avalable , it happened all over Europe. So maybe some countries will have population collapse, but it might be followed by a new population growth, because who will be left, will have everything at their disposal. We should all do like Japan, buckle up , not try to compensate by population replacement, protect our civilizations. It'll be a transitory crisis.

    • @dreamweaver1603
      @dreamweaver1603 Před rokem +10

      @@Myragor exactly! This right now is the enlightenment and our future is a long Dark Age.

    • @spirited1puppetmastered917
      @spirited1puppetmastered917 Před rokem +3

      Rainbow sidewalks

  • @billlyons7024
    @billlyons7024 Před rokem +7

    Whoa ok this is shocking. I'm getting on that full episode now, thanks Chris.

    • @haroldfarquad6886
      @haroldfarquad6886 Před rokem +3

      Well worth it. I hadn't heard of Peter until I came across the full episode, and he's now one of the top half dozen people I want to keep up with.

    • @billlyons7024
      @billlyons7024 Před rokem

      @@haroldfarquad6886 Pretty mind-blowing. As much as I might not like the idea of China becoming the world superpower, if the country collapses there will be a lot of suffering worldwide.

  • @leegalen8383
    @leegalen8383 Před měsícem +1

    This guy is fascinating!

  • @jamieannealbrecht6176
    @jamieannealbrecht6176 Před 10 měsíci

    That's good

  • @BrightResultsMedia
    @BrightResultsMedia Před rokem +9

    I wondered where my anxiety went. Found it by the end of this video.

  • @thisistravis23
    @thisistravis23 Před rokem +21

    Chris, your show keeps getting better and better. Keep it up!

    • @thomasomalley510
      @thomasomalley510 Před rokem

      Yeah man, he's up there wit Lex and Rogan in content and guest selection. I'm here for it!!!
      Love the name, Pickler!

  • @GendoIkari
    @GendoIkari Před 3 měsíci +5

    I don't find any reliable scientific study to confirm these projections. Can we have a source, a link or something please?

    • @isaacmyhrum1735
      @isaacmyhrum1735 Před měsícem +2

      Agreed, most projections I found show China's population still above 1B by 2050 and not in the 650M range until 2100. A decline is happening, but the guest here appears to be on the more rapid side.

    • @stefaan9218
      @stefaan9218 Před měsícem

      Trust me bro

  • @benmartinez8443
    @benmartinez8443 Před měsícem

    I doubt it

  • @segua
    @segua Před rokem +13

    What frightens me the most as our interview is going on here I was researching the guest’s claims on china from population to soil and lol it’s all verified by reputable reporting including chinas own report after 40 years. Mind blowing data in a clip. Well Done gentleman.

  • @wattlebough
    @wattlebough Před rokem +39

    The thing this guy didn’t mention regarding France is it’s not the native ethnic French population that’s growing. The native French population is contracting as dramatically as the Japanese and Koreans. I expect that the newer expanding group will challenge the native French for control of pockets of that country within a decade or 2 that could lead to major social unrest and upheaval that will jeopardise the viability of the EU.

    • @joekerr9036
      @joekerr9036 Před rokem

      The blacks will take over France !

    • @wattlebough
      @wattlebough Před rokem +14

      @@joekerr9036 It’s not really the Africans, it’s the Berbers and Arabs of North Africa and the Middle East mainly that are growing at a high birth rate. Shari’a will come to Paris. It’s already in the northern suburbs.

    • @sirmount2636
      @sirmount2636 Před rokem

      They’ll cause as much disruption as Irish/Italian immigrants to the USA a century ago.

    • @wattlebough
      @wattlebough Před rokem

      @@sirmount2636 It will be far greater. It could lead to civil war.

    • @sirmount2636
      @sirmount2636 Před rokem

      @@wattlebough LOL

  • @richardwalton3521
    @richardwalton3521 Před 9 měsíci

    I just learnedy more infhe past 15 minutes....,
    .

  • @michelehansen1653
    @michelehansen1653 Před rokem +2

    Yep l'd rather stay in New Zealand 🇳🇿 thankyou, best place in the world !

  • @goofinhiemer1153
    @goofinhiemer1153 Před rokem +6

    The one child policy was required as part of the "favored nation trading partner" status for a trade treaty from 1972. Outcome was known.

  • @billoddiea
    @billoddiea Před rokem +215

    Who would have guessed that Chad pops out the most kids per capita…

    • @starguy2718
      @starguy2718 Před rokem +11

      😄😄😄😄

    • @Rosskles
      @Rosskles Před rokem +1

      @@chriswatson1698 lol do you think they just got by hearsay or sumin?

    • @chriswatson1698
      @chriswatson1698 Před rokem

      @@Rosskles In western countries, there are bureaucracies that keep track of people. I doubt that many of the countries in Africa have the institutions that require accurate demographic data.

    • @Rosskles
      @Rosskles Před rokem

      @@chriswatson1698 Gotcha, see your point now.

    • @rfbthree
      @rfbthree Před rokem +14

      It’s cuz he’s a Chad 😂

  • @surfdocer103
    @surfdocer103 Před 3 měsíci

    You were right , Peter

  • @tgoodson2
    @tgoodson2 Před 11 měsíci

    It's not easy to determine resource production. It depends on other factors besides supply of resource such as lower wages, lack of regulation, ease of corruption of politicians. Countries that have high production may in fact not have as much of the resource as countries such as Canada, higher wages and strict regulation and lack of corruption. Potash is the perfect example

  • @barnyfraggles
    @barnyfraggles Před rokem +4

    Fascinating and terrifying in equal measure.

  • @osarueseosato1144
    @osarueseosato1144 Před rokem +12

    I'm Nigerian living in Nigeria what he says about sub Saharan African countries having importation problems is true

    • @tendies9248
      @tendies9248 Před rokem

      South Africa just dumped tonnes of oranges because of a disagreement with the EU, they're creating these problems on purpose because of EU made a silly new law about temperature in storage

    • @kieranh2005
      @kieranh2005 Před rokem +5

      I remember when Rhodesia was the bread basket of sub Saharan Africa and an exporter.

    • @AUniqueHandleName444
      @AUniqueHandleName444 Před rokem

      @@kieranh2005 that is sounding suspiciously like heresy old man

    • @bigshorty4855
      @bigshorty4855 Před rokem

      @@kieranh2005 it's called Zimbabwe.

  • @happyhome2523
    @happyhome2523 Před 8 měsíci

    What is the difference in timelines of the Chinese food production decline and population decline? Perhaps the change in demand/supply will equalise the difference?

  • @user-fc1gq5xd9e
    @user-fc1gq5xd9e Před 2 měsíci

    same thing happened to the passenger pigeon...

  • @grimgrimey
    @grimgrimey Před rokem +23

    It's a scary proposition for China.
    I wonder what Peter thinks of America's society and the way it's imploding from the inside out... The corrupt perpetuaion of the system and how it's completely unstoppable

    • @robbenvanpersie1562
      @robbenvanpersie1562 Před rokem +9

      America is rome 2.0

    • @DianeMerriam
      @DianeMerriam Před rokem

      The US is totally self-sufficient in food and, if the government gets out of the way, self-sufficient in energy in less than a year. We're about as safe a country as there has ever been. Neither Mexico nor Canada is a threat to us. Yes, the Canadians burned down the White House, but that was back in 1812 and we've pretty well forgiven them for that. Mexico tried and we wound up getting almost half of what was Mexico for our own. Much more profitable working with us than against us. The other two sides have huge moats on them protected by a navy that could take on the combined navies of the rest of the world several times over. No one is invading us here in the states. It's been 80 years since anyone has tried and all they got were a few Aleutian islands for a few months before we got around to kicking them off. There were territories we got from the Spanish-American war that Japan took and we had to take back, but nothing else on our home soil. Our demographics are not an inverted pyramid. More like a chimney. Not great, but not bad. We have great ports and more navigable inland waterways plus the intercostals, than any other country in the world and it's ten times cheaper to ship by boat or barge than rail (of which we also have an excellent system) or trucks (which drive on a really good interstate system). Only about 15% of our economy is engaged in any sort of direct foreign trade and half of that is with Mexico and Canada. We just aren't as geographically, structurally, or economically exposed to the same hazards as almost all of the rest of the developed and developing world is.
      Not saying we don't have problems. We do. Lots of them. But not existential ones like having your population shrinking every year with the average ages going up and up. We're going to be dealing with a labor shortage, at least for a while, but I think we can handle the scale that we're looking at here.
      What happens when a population ages? Once someone hits retirement, they're gone, overnight. They are no longer working and paying taxes and contributing anything. Instead, they start drawing pensions and Social Security and Medicare. They take all their investments and move them to super safe assets so capital availability dries up. Their years of experience are simply gone. Almost nowhere are there enough people in the generations behind them to fill their shoes.
      In some countries, like Russia, where they gave up on education, the generations coming up aren't really even halfway trained to take the jobs of those close to retiring. Not to mention the huge brain drain it's been going through in the last six months and especially in the last week or so. They're heavy in the contingent of the very few (primarily tech workers) who were qualified and filling important roles that no one else is educationally capable of taking over. That loss may well be worse for them in the longer term than what they're going though simply by being cut off of many goods by the sanctions. The multinationals that have pulled out have taken their expertise with them as well. The Russian technicians who worked with them may know that this valve got turned and then that one, but not know why or when to do it.
      Even in the rest of the world though, there aren't as many young people buying cars and homes and paying for education and raising a family. So who buys the consumer goods that are being manufactured? You can't sell it in your own country because you don't have enough consumers anymore and almost all the other countries you try to sell to are in the same boat. If you can't sell it, you can't make it. If you can't make it, then the businesses start closing. Your economy shrinks.
      Japan was the first developed country to hit this wall. They didn't have a Baby Boomer generation. Their "lost decade" has now lasted for more than three decades. With many fewer working age people, they automated the heck out of everything they could. They built factories in the places where they sell their goods and where there are still workers. There's a dozen or more countries ready to hit that wall in the next decade or so. Japan got there first. It's going to be a lot harder for the rest, even if they are a big enough economy to have the money to try to do the automation and production moves and many, if not most of them, aren't big enough to try.

    • @pugilist102
      @pugilist102 Před rokem +9

      America has lasted for 250 yrs, been through a civil war, two world wars, industrial age, information age, the Constitution still stands. As long as the Constitution stands, our ocean moats intact and our soil fertile, we will always prosper.

    • @juanzingarello4005
      @juanzingarello4005 Před rokem +1

      @@robbenvanpersie1562 Rome lasted 500 years. Thats nothing to scoff at and Rome was too large for its own good during a time when internet connectivity wasn’t a thing.

    • @grimgrimey
      @grimgrimey Před rokem

      @@pugilist102 your beloved nation has illegally invaded, done dozens of coups, backed extremists, sanctioned, bombed and threatened dozens more.seeing as it's immune from condemnation, reparations, or even a fair trial in international courts to address it's exceptionalism. One day the fight will come to your homeland and that will be a massive dose of karma. If infighting doesn't bring down your democracy (it's already captured and declining fast) then it's weakening dollar, unipolar shift and growing district and dislike of your nation will render it a side note in history.
      Read Bobby Kennedys Anthony faucci to understand how corrupt, and foul America has become.
      Some American people are fantastic and hardworking folk but are drowned out by the dipshit uneducated uncultured self righteous maniacs that govern your sick nation,

  • @VeritasIncrebresco
    @VeritasIncrebresco Před rokem +143

    Bro when he said the Chinese population will drop to 650 million my stomach dropped, that's insane. I would rather have a wealthy China than a poor China w/nukes

    • @Montezuma0
      @Montezuma0 Před rokem +64

      Why would China become poor just because they have less people? When America only had 50 million it was still a wealthy prosperous country. Endless growth is impossible so at some point the population needs to decrease to something more sustainable and stable

    • @sabelotoda2
      @sabelotoda2 Před rokem +43

      @@Montezuma0 the problem is that if they keep having more old people then young the economi will collaps that could mean war and a lot of suffering wich in turn makes the population growth worse.
      It will propabley be stable again some day but in the mean time it will be brutal for china and probably the world.

    • @Montezuma0
      @Montezuma0 Před rokem +35

      @@sabelotoda2 Short term it’s bad but long term it’s more sustainable. You can’t just have unlimited population growth forever. It’s impossible. Better to decrease the population to something more sustainable and then keep the birth rate stable

    • @sabelotoda2
      @sabelotoda2 Před rokem +12

      @@Montezuma0 the idesl is too have a stable population you do that by having a birth rate of 2.1 so that the population dose not shrink but dose not gorw either.
      That how i took the first coment in the short ther the conditions could get sooo bad that it could lead too nuclear war.
      In the best sanatio they would have a 2.1 birth rate alredy but they dont have it and who knows how much time will pass before they change it.

    • @julianbryantjb
      @julianbryantjb Před rokem +20

      There is something you need to take into consideration in the gender imbalance.
      1. Materialistic mindset in many women. They want to leverage their beauty for a potential "high value " suitor. For some women it is annual salary and net worth that is set at a minimum number.
      2. Independent mindset to want their own money from a career instead of wanting to start a family.
      3. Waste of time 16 to 35 are prime child bearing years, but it is spent working to aquire material gain.

  • @KC-ku5sp
    @KC-ku5sp Před měsícem +1

    Whenever I hear somebody say, “for sure”, I’m skeptical.

  • @shawncarroll5255
    @shawncarroll5255 Před rokem +3

    I have been watching developments in the US reference meat production over the last couple of years. Having a teenager who has gone through five sizes of pants in 2 1/2 years has sort of made it very germane.
    Due to the 20 plus year drought in the western part of the United States, that region now has had a reduction in both beef and dairy herds of up to 50%. That's one of the reasons you have seen a slow but steady increase in beef prices in the US for over a decade. Even if we finally have enough water due to the snowpack this year, ranchers and dairy farmers have already slaughtered the cattle they could not afford to feed in 2022. They won't be available for this year. In some areas that has been up to 50% reduction.
    Then you had the avian influenza from last year that created record egg prices. Over 50 million birds were killed by the disease or were culled to prevent it spread. But they were just rebuilding the flocks in November/December, thus I was able to get an 18 count carton of eggs for $1.99 on sale in December.
    Except we now have another outbreak. Egg prices have gone crazy, and Easter's coming up. Chicken is more expensive too, McDonald's had their McChicken Jr. sandwich increase from $1.79 to $2.39 at the local store in 2022. Yes some of it was from increased pay, but a goodly amount of it was also from fewer chickens.
    But at least there was still pork. It's not as healthy, but heck It's more affordable. Except if the Chinese are going to be buying up a goodly amount of the US production (they bought out one of the four largest meatpackers in the United States several years ago) those prices are going to start climbing again too. I noticed two months ago my son's favorite breakfast links had increased at Walmart from $2.50 to $2.76. now why.
    Happy happy joy joy.

    • @trippmiller6199
      @trippmiller6199 Před rokem

      Heavy bro

    • @edschultheis9537
      @edschultheis9537 Před 10 měsíci

      You can largely thank Joe Biden and all who voted for him for the high inflation of food prices (in the US) in the past 2-1/2 years. His wacky policies have substantially increased the cost of everything in the US since he became president.

  • @TheStringBreaker
    @TheStringBreaker Před rokem +9

    Zeihan is underrated af! Glad you had him on.

  • @kyleme9697
    @kyleme9697 Před rokem +20

    I'd love to see videos of people reacting to Peter Zeihan's commentary :) Just about everything he says about China boggles the mind. I get a lot more out of these interviews with him than just from his own videos, because of the questions people ask.

    • @thecustodian1023
      @thecustodian1023 Před rokem +2

      I'd like to say he's overplaying it but rumors of China's real function and or lack of function have been in play for decades and have always run really close to what he is saying and have hit most marks sooner than were assumed at the time.
      So....maybe?

    • @rap3208
      @rap3208 Před rokem

      Search for "Peter zeihan and Nathan Rich" and you'll find nathan Rich reacting to Zeihan's videos.

    • @douglassun8456
      @douglassun8456 Před 3 měsíci

      @@thecustodian1023 Zeihen pushes it with how he phrases his arguments, but I think that's a function of his consulting work and trying to grab people's attention when he's giving a keynote. The more people in the West learn about what is and has been going on in China (especially since the pandemic) the more of them come around to his general view of things. I once double-checked his population numbers on China, and they're pretty much in line with what the UN is reporting (I think it's UNESCO?).

  • @maryvalentine9090
    @maryvalentine9090 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I took some college courses here in America back around 2013 2014 and was in a class with a couple of Chinese students also studying. They spoke English very well and we’re very friendly and in a conversation I had with them I brought up the subject of China’s, “one child only“ policy and they were pretty quiet but I said, “that means there’s no brothers, no sisters, no cousins, no nieces, no nephews, no aunts, and no uncles. That isn’t a normal human society.” I went on to tell them that I’m the seventh child of a family of nine children and they were astonished. But concerning my comments about the policy, The girl was very sweet but spewed out the propaganda she was taught that there’s just too many people in China. The dude was much more honest he didn’t like it either, and he said, “if you’re rich enough in China you can have more than one child.“ he knew it was messed up. It’s scary how much this policy has damaged that country. Really terrible. Shocking.

  • @Ailsworth
    @Ailsworth Před měsícem

    One wonders how corn could possibly have grown at all, before the emergence of the fertilizer sector. (academics spend very little time on farms)

  • @djammer
    @djammer Před rokem +11

    The unknown factor here that’s not discussed is the rise of AI and robot labor

    • @rayhill5767
      @rayhill5767 Před rokem +1

      Robot labor put you out of work. Now you’re broke.

    • @stillsmashin1529
      @stillsmashin1529 Před rokem +1

      @@rayhill5767 what if the robot allows me to stay in the house as a pet while the AI goes to work

  • @melvinmayfield470
    @melvinmayfield470 Před rokem +3

    Well presented & very-informative my Brother! (As always, P.Z., 'full' of valuable 'info', and, your 'common-man' questioning approach, is well-handled!)
    BTW: For what it's worth; being the single-parent of two college-going folk, (Also, returning to re-educate myself!) I don't have much free-time, but when I do, as now, I choose to watch your & P.Z.'s programming. I've been a Subscriber for a while now (Get your notifications also!), and yet, as I 'tuned-in' to your presentation today, I noticed the 'Subscribe' button was showing an invitation to subscribe.(?) Make sure you're getting credit, for your subscriptions, my Brother. Take Care! Be Well.

  • @jneumann5251
    @jneumann5251 Před měsícem

    I used to read Zeihan a lot but have found his analysis, though interesting, does not play out.

  • @richardcottone6620
    @richardcottone6620 Před rokem

    can fusion affect the outcome

  • @Mooooov0815
    @Mooooov0815 Před rokem +13

    I think it’s very interesting to hear that urbanization is correlated with child births. While that makes sense on the first sight, is it really the urbanization that is among the factor that leads to a reduction kn child births or is it the general inaccessibility of real estate thanks to a completely f-ed real estate market? Would be really curious to read up more on that, especially because it completely contradicts my personal attitude towards this, any recommendations for good resources?

    • @protorhinocerator142
      @protorhinocerator142 Před rokem +6

      There is an intellectual gain to be had from urbanization, which the Chinese were pushing. They wanted super-metropolis city clusters with amazing levels of creativity and productive output. But there goes your replacement generation.
      Maybe one or two super-metropolis zones would be of benefit in a country, but they would be thirsty for new labor since they can't birth their own.
      Also, covid has really exposed the flaws in having everything be urbanized. It all breaks down. There has to be a better balance.

    • @bobfucker3963
      @bobfucker3963 Před rokem

      People that live in big cities dont have as many or any kids. It's more expensive, less room, etc.

  • @somtimesieat2411
    @somtimesieat2411 Před rokem +9

    Peter Zeihan lesss gooooooo

  • @zzdoodzz
    @zzdoodzz Před rokem +34

    Great to hear ideas expressed by Peter that I have thought about for some time now. I have for years been talking to friends about Africa and other developing parts of the world being gifted industrialization, modern technology, medicine and so on and how they have a hard time handling the tech because they did not take the time to slowly acquire it and therefore develop the systems and society to adapt to those rapid changes. I often pose the question, what would happen to America if aliens showed up and gave us tech so that we all lived to hundreds of years, it would drastically change society rapidly.

    • @blaineedwards8078
      @blaineedwards8078 Před rokem

      Those aliens would be from Uranus. They live underground there in bunkers, so yes, THERE ARE ALIENS IN URANUS...

    • @ReasonAboveEverything
      @ReasonAboveEverything Před 8 měsíci

      Perhaps the very low average iq of 70 has something to do with it? The pixel rate is simply too high.