Global Capitalism: China vs. US - System Rising vs. Falling [September 2022]

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  • čas přidán 13. 09. 2022
  • China vs. US - System Rising vs. Falling [September 2022]
    In this lecture, Prof. Wolff will discuss the following:
    1. Compare economic performances (GDP growth, inflation, real wages)
    2. Ukraine War/Taiwan Provocations as both China-US conflicts
    3. US edges closer to civil war and foreign wars at same time: implications
    *Global Capitalism is produced by @democracyatwrk and co-sponsored by Left Forum. We make it a point to provide the show free of ads. Please consider supporting @democracyatwrk Donate one time or become a monthly donor by visiting us at www.democracyatwork.info/donate. Your contributions help keep this content free and accessible to all.
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Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @magicsmurfy
    @magicsmurfy Před rokem +444

    I agree, 100 years of humuliation. I am a Chinese, in my fifties. I went to UK and was humuliated, now I live in China, and I am very happy. Watching everyone getting out of poverty in the last 25 years. I could see that with my own eyes.

    • @nihleigleca6702
      @nihleigleca6702 Před rokem

      Everyone? China now has more mega riches and more billionaires than US now, yet is also home to 600 million people who are living off on less than 140$ of monthly income. This unsustainable, glaring inequality will implode into social unrest once the economic growth inevitably slows down. Economically, China is state-capitalistic, and these poors have no safety net whatsoever. It's not getting out of poverty if they can slide back into it immediately afterwards.

    • @bluewater454
      @bluewater454 Před rokem

      Capitalism works, doesn’t it? Even when it is allowed in a socialist country like China. Don’t screw it up.

    • @byn135
      @byn135 Před rokem +3

      some brainwashed westners will come to this comment and say you are a CCP bot

    • @magicsmurfy
      @magicsmurfy Před rokem +77

      @@bluewater454 ​ Don't get me wrong, capitalism was all I knew thru my entire life, and I could see leaning towards just one system has its own problem. Like I said, Hong Kong is a 100% capitalism and money drives everything, even though at the expenses of social discontent. The way we were taught was, if you could not stand the heat, then stay out. Survival the fittest. If you are poor, you can only blame yourself for being poor. The poor in Hong Kong never stood a chance. Only a handful could escape that dead loop; then I came to Beijing at first, I was amazed how the system of socialism worked. Let's take food, transport, basic housing, even if I were just a cleaner, or a waiter at a lower rank society, my cost of living can be very low. I could save up money to get onto the next stage. Whereas in Hong Kong, if you were a cleaner, u will be forever as a cleaner. It's hard to get out of that loop. Hard to accumulate savings. There is nothing wrong with Hong Kong's vampirstic approach, after all that is the true capitalism. Tunnels, buses, food.... there are investors you need to satisfy first, maximise profit whenever u could, forget about the general plebs, that is not my problem. My only boss is the investors' happiness. In China, you cannot run it like that, there is a limit on how could drive profit to an extreme. The govt will place guideline and rules to curb any potential social discontent. That is why I say, both systems have their pros and cons. And China, got the right mix of both. It surprises me how the system does give equal chances to many people here, regardless of your upbringing, whereas in Hong Kong, if u did not start at the top of the food chain in the very beginning, u might not be in for a good ride. USA used to be like a utopia, people had a chance. It is now getting more and more unbalance. Why should anyone go to University would end up with a big debt right from the beginning? Why would losing your job means u lose your right to access health care? That is the very basic human right that many American are not getting. Therefore, US should also consider adopting some level of socialism to quell the social discontent, and not just about the Dow Jones / Nasdaq - only a handful of people can buy afford to buy stocks and be benefited from that.

    • @magicsmurfy
      @magicsmurfy Před rokem +58

      @@nihleigleca6702 That figure is not entirely correct. Let me give you a perspective. You are looking at the pure USD purchase power. So let's say your US$140 is correct (not argument for that for now). Let's take a job as a cleaner in Shanghai. I could get paid at US$500-600 per month (pretty much tax free). In Hong Kong, for the same job, US$1200 - 1500 per month. However, you will have a much harder life in Hong Kong at 1.2-1.5k per month USD versus China. In Hong Kong, just a for a bedsit in the city, would cost you US$500 alone, food cost is much highly than China. The net net of all that is, I could save money and survivein China, while in Hong Kong, I am in that infinite loop of dead end. Now moving into Tier 2 city, if I am a cleaner, I get probably US$200-400 max. Again, cost of living for housing, for food, transport, all go down. In Hong Kong (or maybe we should compare with San Francisco if you have data), you have zero chance to get yourself out. If I seriously lose my job, I could easily hide myself in places like HeGang (u will hv to look it up) and with very minimal amount of money, I can survive, and live much more comfortably than the poor in Hong Kong or maybe San Francisco - all these are so-called advance cities. Also, many people, when they have no incomes, u need to look at their total family earnings. Many of them, have their kids working in the city and feed them back to the rural area. That statistics is distorted. Finally, many people in the tier 3 or tier 4 cities, I notice, they don't even spend anything, they have land to grow food, chicken, pigs, I might have more money than they do, but they just produce stuff that I could not in a city. I don't know whether I should pity them, or they should pity me just because I am holding an iPhone and they are holding a cheap skate phone - just living as happily as me do here in a tier 1 city (yes my pint of boddington costs me US$10 in Shanghai, while they could just drink 1 Litre of Tsingdao beer at US$1 or less, just as good). My point is, don't use average earning in USD to determine their way of life. You are making an assumptions that many of them need to use their earnings to buy stuff in the west. To them having a phone is probably not even neccessary (I am exaggerating a little). [have u seen the price for a Xiaomi Phone? just as sexy as an iPhone but 10 times cheaper]

  • @adelineyee1815
    @adelineyee1815 Před rokem +4

    Americans listen to prof. Americans LISTEN TO THIS PROFESSOR WOLF!!!!! He is telling you the TRUTH AND THE WHOLE TRUTH!!!!!

  • @jann9507
    @jann9507 Před rokem +18

    Fantastic talk Professor!
    Wish every student in high school was made to view this talk to learn about how Capitalism works in the US

    • @raymarius5623
      @raymarius5623 Před 7 měsíci

      Very true and so clear .
      Are ours leaders could take few min and lessening forgetting awhile theirs stupid and inhuman approach as humanity and sentiments are the foundation of the people they represent most of leaders become imposters as they actions doesn't not match the duty of the position they occupied .r
      The problem is that it's the people who pay for their wrong doing or for their incapability.

  • @MrAllanHee
    @MrAllanHee Před 7 měsíci +5

    Dr.Wolff is a brilliant analytical economics professor with insights into current worldwide economic trends.

  • @shaneharrison8648
    @shaneharrison8648 Před rokem +36

    This talk was 100% spot on. The anti Chinese rhetoric that is stuffed in our faces everyday, from the media, is something that appals me. I myself have lived in China for many years and understand the way at which they go about their lives, and that is why I enjoyed this talk so much. Thank you.

  • @behnamzakhireh6425
    @behnamzakhireh6425 Před rokem +48

    No one can match Professor Wolff in making complex socioeconomic discussions so easy to understand.👍🙏😻

    • @dimitrov378
      @dimitrov378 Před 11 měsíci

      😊😊

    • @dimitrov378
      @dimitrov378 Před 11 měsíci

      0:38 0:40 😅

    • @rogerjackman6281
      @rogerjackman6281 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@dimitrov378😅

    • @avainvestmentanalytics
      @avainvestmentanalytics Před 6 měsíci

      The problem is you have been fooled by his inaccurate statements and exaggerations. I will be exposing this CCP shill soon.

    • @holiday8473
      @holiday8473 Před 5 měsíci

      Hi, everyone! I am a worker with a Chinese "peasant identity" (under Chinese identity politics and household registration system, farmers are considered the lowest end of the population). After Professor Qin Hui's ideological enlightenment and awakening, I very agree with Professor Qin Hui's point of view: in the current context of globalization, the constitutional democratic system is being challenged by the autocratic Chinese model (that is, bad money drives out good money). Democratic countries around the world must deeply understand and understand the fact that since the CCP came into power in 1949, hundreds of millions of Chinese farmers have worked hard to pay public food, agricultural taxes The construction of water conservancy projects for free provided the CCP with the original financial accumulation at the beginning of the founding of the People's Republic of China. Under the family planning policy, Chinese farmers were forced to have abortions, ligation and ring fencing, and payment of fines for excess births. Farmers were restricted by the household registration system in rural areas and could not move freely, leading a serf like life. During the three-year period from 1959 to 1961, there were no natural disasters at all. It was entirely due to Mao Zedong's policies such as the "Great Leap Forward" and "Great Steel Refining" that local officials, in response to Mao Zedong's policies, falsely reported ultra-high grain yields and plundered the surplus food of farmers, which resulted in the tragic starvation of 40 million people in human history. The vast majority of these were farmers, At that time, not a single Communist official starved to death. After China's reform and opening up in 1980, the first generation of farmers went to cities to work as construction workers, sanitation workers, cleaners, and miners Waiting for the most tiring and dirty jobs, China joined the WTO in the early 21st century under the background of economic globalization. For example, the second generation of farmers entered red sweatshops as workers, manufacturing cheap goods for the world. Due to the lack of independent trade unions to fight for their legal rights, they could not enjoy social welfare benefits such as work-related injuries, unemployment, medical care, elderly care, housing, and children's education in urban areas, Their children were forced to return to rural areas for education due to their household registration as "farmers" and the "school district housing" system, resulting in the world's largest tragic situation of left behind children and elderly people living alone in rural areas in China. Nowadays, the first generation of farmers have become old and lose their ability to work. They are ruthlessly driven back to the countryside and struggle to make ends meet with a monthly pension of over 100 yuan. The minimum standard for urban household registration is over 2000 yuan per month, which is more than 20 times that of rural household registration. Communist Party officials enjoy privileges and benefits, and the annual medical and health expenses are as high as several million yuan. National level officials spend one billion yuan on tourism in a year. Due to the enormous sacrifices and contributions of these two generations of Chinese farmers, China has become the world's second-largest economy. However, the Chinese farmer group has received exploitation and negative welfare treatment time and time again in the process of national wealth distribution and redistribution, while civil servants and high-ranking officials within the Communist Party system enjoy privileges and high welfare treatment. The Communist Party government utilizes the advantage of low human rights and cheap labor to attract a large amount of international financial capital investment, making China the largest red sweatshop in the world. The reason why cheap goods made in China are popular worldwide is due to the "low human rights" and "negative welfare" of the Chinese "farmer identity" worker group. Even if they work overtime for extended periods of time every day, they barely survive with a meager income. To change the Communist Party government's use of the "low human rights" and "negative welfare" system of China's vast vulnerable group of farmers in unfair competition in the globalized trade market, democratic countries around the world have the responsibility to supervise and pressure the Chinese government to demand an increase in the human rights and social welfare protection of hundreds of millions of Chinese farmers and disadvantaged groups, in order to solve the problem of trade fairness under economic globalization. The trade sanctions imposed by the United States and anti-dumping measures by the European Union cannot solve the problem of trade deficits. If democratic countries believe that the human rights and welfare protection of hundreds of millions of Chinese farmers and vulnerable groups are not related to you, it will gradually lead to a decrease in the standards of wages and welfare protection for labor in democratic countries (such as left-wing political parties in the United States proposing policies to reduce social welfare protection), because although labor in various countries cannot move freely, But capital is profit driven and can flow freely. Which capitalist doesn't like a labor market like China without strong trade unions. If the human rights and welfare standards of Chinese "farmer identity" workers cannot be gradually raised to align with those of democratic countries, then the human rights and welfare standards of democratic countries' workers can only be gradually lowered to align with those of Chinese "farmer identity" workers (this can be seen from the documentary "American Factory"). Democratic countries around the world cannot turn a blind eye to the history of labor tears behind China's "peasant identity" after enjoying nearly 40 years of cheap goods and economic benefits made in China. Please stop having illusions about the CCP and implementing appeasement policies. While paying attention to the human rights of Xinjiang, Tibet, Hong Kong and people in exile, it is more important to pay attention to the human rights situation of all Chinese people, Only by constantly putting pressure on the CCP to improve the human rights of all Chinese people and the welfare protection of vulnerable groups, cultivate the rights awareness of Chinese citizens and taxpayers, help China establish free and independent trade unions, learn from the welfare accountability of Polish Solidarity Trade Union, force financial openness and budget transparency, will China gradually embark on the path of constitutional democracy. A free and democratic China is indispensable for the stability and peace of the world, and it is also a responsibility that democratic countries around the world cannot evade, because we are all citizens of the Earth. I hope that people with conscience around the world can work together to make constitutional democracy overcome dictatorship, let good currency overcome bad currency, and make this world more civilized.

  • @themindsojourner
    @themindsojourner Před rokem +63

    It's not only China like most westerners praying. The whole East Asia has emerging back very fast in the last three decades. I lived in Europe around mid 80 to 90, now in Asia. It's noticeable that people's quality of life is jumping up.
    Like Kishore Mahbubani always said America's main problem it that it had turned into a plutocracy.

  • @lykaojalao2733
    @lykaojalao2733 Před rokem +12

    Wow
    This is an 1 hour long analysis and I told myself…what’s…already done.
    I believe I could listen to Prof all day without getting bored.
    To understand Prof analysis here, like he said one should not pay attention to the political system but rather see what happened in the two systems.
    Thank you Professor

  • @Riggsnic_co
    @Riggsnic_co Před 11 měsíci +364

    As a foreigner who lived through the entire duration of zero covid for the past 3 years in China, this is by far the most objective commentary I’ve seen on CZcams to date. Economists and business leaders are voicing concerns at the start of 2023 that the year could be a difficult one. JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said Tuesday that the Federal Reserve may need to raise interest rates to 6% to fight inflation, higher than the peak level between 5% and 5.5% in 2023 that most Fed officials penciled in after their December meeting. Although I read an article of people that grossed profits up to $500k during this crash, what are the best stocks to buy now or put on a watchlist

    • @martingiavarini
      @martingiavarini Před 11 měsíci +3

      Emotionally-charged decisions to sell off large quantities of stocks or other investments now lock in your losses, removing any chance for future growth.

    • @hermanramos7092
      @hermanramos7092 Před 11 měsíci +3

      A 2020 Northwestern Mutual study found that 71% of U.S. adults admit their financial planning needs improvement. However, only 29% of Americans work with a financial advisor.

    • @Oly_laura
      @Oly_laura Před 11 měsíci +3

      Very true, a huge part of my portfolio growth has come during this bear market. I've been able to scale from $180K to $572K in a short period of time. I basically was just following the steps and guideline from my financial advisor. as long as you've professional help, you're good to go

    • @martingiavarini
      @martingiavarini Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@Oly_laura Mind if I ask you to recommend this particular coach you using their service? Seems you've figured it all out.

    • @Oly_laura
      @Oly_laura Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@martingiavarini Well i won't say i have...Her name is ‘Catherine Morrison Evans’ can't divulge much. Most likely, the internet should have her basic info, you can research if you like

  • @nicolasbouyiouclis4726
    @nicolasbouyiouclis4726 Před rokem +12

    The most comprehensive explanation on such difficult subject..!
    Thank you Sir for making it so simple and very easy to understand it.
    I go back and forward many times through out the video to digest all the details... and I really appreciate the effort you're putting on these educational videos which are the best for us out here to learn about our country and the world!!
    Thank you!!

  • @calvinchung2036
    @calvinchung2036 Před 7 měsíci +5

    So well analysed, professor Wolff deserves to receive the award of 2 Nobel prizes .one for economic achievement 🏆 and one for world peace🏆 ✌️🎉🎉🎉

  • @iamhe999
    @iamhe999 Před rokem +13

    Looking carefully at the Character of the US government and culture and the Character of China and its culture.,, as they both exist today.. There is no doubt or question in my mind China has it... China is the one I would like to see survive and become Humanity's Main Government system.

  • @larryfranklin2479
    @larryfranklin2479 Před rokem +295

    The scary thing is this is the first empire to collapse with a massive nuclear arsenal, and the neocons in charge seem to have watched way to many James Bond and Mission Impossible movies and fancy themselves as invincible.

    • @beastmode8203
      @beastmode8203 Před rokem

      We're not going to collapse and if China surpasses us you will get a nuclear war. We will choose death before letting them be number one.

    • @alloomis1635
      @alloomis1635 Před rokem +3

      on the contrary, it hasn't collapsed yet, and the first was the ussr.
      russia by itself is certainly still a player on the world stage, but putin has not yet felt it necessary to use nuclear weapons.. he may have to. can't afford to lose.
      usa is better placed. they just fight for greed. so they have 'lost' in several places, without seeing the use of mushroom clouds.

    • @willengel2458
      @willengel2458 Před rokem

      US had commissioned a study of feasibility of first strike a few years back, if not mistaken, by Georgetown University. there are less than a handful of countries could survive the first strike. US won't dare to fu*k with either Russia, or China.
      there is no defense against hypersonic missiles.

    • @YCHTT
      @YCHTT Před rokem

      Those movies were funded by CIA to brainwash its subject for propaganda purposes; so they can both justify all the evil deeds they carry out and at the same, recruit such useful idiot sheep thinking they are some kind of national hero to do the require evil deeds around the world & even domestically (most likely in the form of drills that went live suddenly without telling the testers). The neocons are merely useful idiots who think they are elites working for the financiers behind the scene who they probably have never met.

    • @leroitiaks
      @leroitiaks Před rokem +38

      @@alloomis1635 The USSR was never an empire except in the mind of imperialist westerners

  • @aliciamcqueen5888
    @aliciamcqueen5888 Před rokem +12

    Prof. Wolf will always be my favorite economist...of all time!!!

  • @phyllisthompson4207
    @phyllisthompson4207 Před rokem +100

    I have to agree! They are really very observant, and they try to learn from other people’s mistake, and that is very important , since we all will never know everything , and have to learn from each other. The day we think we are above learning, from others, is the day we fail..

    • @davidlazarus67
      @davidlazarus67 Před rokem +20

      Just look at the Chinese space program. Every single mission has been a success. They were excluded from the International Space Station, so built their own. They now dominate so many sectors of technology that they will be setting standards soon enough.

    • @alanfriesen9837
      @alanfriesen9837 Před rokem +3

      But would Xi Jinping be the kind of guy that you would want to drink a beer with?

    • @kwokholuk8723
      @kwokholuk8723 Před rokem

      @@alanfriesen9837
      Sure, why not? He was demonized by the Western medias.

    • @yenphung8809
      @yenphung8809 Před rokem +4

      @@alanfriesen9837 why not? He is full of wisdom.

    • @alanfriesen9837
      @alanfriesen9837 Před rokem

      @@yenphung8809 Oh, I agree.

  • @ebrahimkhan322
    @ebrahimkhan322 Před rokem +3

    Thank you, professor, for explaining a very complicated economic systems of America and that of the PEOPLES Republic of China and that you have given us the American citizens and our political ELITES a kind and a Very prudent recipe to examine for the sake of WORLD PEACE!
    I SALUTE YOU AND THANK YOU AGAIN FROM THE BOTTOM OF MY HEART!

  • @robertling1724
    @robertling1724 Před rokem +67

    Wow, everything said is so true, every educated person should listen to this lecture by Professor Wolff with an open mind., especially the politicians in Washington! Thank you so much Professor Wolff. God bless you. I am really concerned about the divisions in this country right now.

    • @anacom4238
      @anacom4238 Před rokem +5

      The politicians in Washington are hopeless.

    • @dianagwinn8143
      @dianagwinn8143 Před rokem

      Our politricksters seem more concerned about their own asses than about us. They don't really care about us. MJ was right.

    • @michelestidhamwhitmore8313
      @michelestidhamwhitmore8313 Před rokem +3

      I am an uneducated person listening to prof. Wolff and I understand what he is saying. I don't understand why you say "every educated person" instead of everyone should listen.

    • @fanllawf
      @fanllawf Před rokem +2

      @@michelestidhamwhitmore8313 I was going to say the same thing; why only educated people should listen? Do you think lesser educated folks are "stupid" and would not understand? That's discrimination.

    • @genelarson6849
      @genelarson6849 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@michelestidhamwhitmore8313Wolff was educated by Carl Marx and he is blind to Communist short comings

  • @adelineyee1815
    @adelineyee1815 Před rokem +5

    WAKE UP AMERICANS LISTEN TO THIS MAN - PROFESSOR WOLF!!!! HE SPEAKS THE TRUTH!!!!!

  • @ismael_561
    @ismael_561 Před rokem +151

    The line where the professor so eloquently stated that the rich people pay less in education than the working class people is so True, and not only in Education they pay less in every type of loan, Business Loans, Car loans mortgages everything…… The working class people are taken advantage economically while at the same time they are pitted against each other.

    • @bradleyp3655
      @bradleyp3655 Před rokem

      "Obedient workers" -George Carlin
      czcams.com/video/tetndXjHG1U/video.html

    • @alsah-him1571
      @alsah-him1571 Před rokem +19

      Being poor is expensive. Even banks will charge you for not having enough money in your checking and savings accounts. it's ridiculous

    • @meenki347
      @meenki347 Před rokem

      I worked in a nightclub and rich celebrities got in free and were showered with free drinks. If regular people saw stars, they would of course tell their friends and attracting more business. I then realized that super rich celebrities live in a communist utopia.

    • @KayyHong
      @KayyHong Před rokem +6

      Who benefits from the loans the poor people are burdened with? THE RICH. of course!

    • @kevinjohnson9533
      @kevinjohnson9533 Před rokem +5

      Great statement Ismael.

  • @cn13434809241
    @cn13434809241 Před rokem +31

    FYI China's State-run colleges and universities' anual truition fee is 3000 RMB per semester, which is USD 430 at the current exhange rate; and dormitry cost USD200-250 per student per semester.

  • @stevenmontanez715
    @stevenmontanez715 Před rokem +17

    Thank profesor Wolff for the most simple explanation of Chinas economical model gracias for a complex topic explained simple

  • @anjunadeep.8384
    @anjunadeep.8384 Před rokem +42

    "The thesis of private capitalism,
    The antithesis of state capitalism,
    & The synthesis that the Chinese has now shown us"
    Well said !

    • @danmcqueen5295
      @danmcqueen5295 Před rokem

      Unfortunately the arrogance of our leaders never allows them to learn from a successful example. What is it that arrogance demands in that situation? Double down! Should be the US's middle name. We the people of this united states and the world at large's most dire problem is THE LEADERS OF THIS COUNTRY.

  • @lucyblueeyes3858
    @lucyblueeyes3858 Před rokem +4

    Bravo, Professor Wolff.👏👏👏

  • @jvs333
    @jvs333 Před rokem +17

    Prof. Wolfe’s videos are like 4 yrs of college. The man is a brilliant educator. Thank you Prof. Wolfe!!

    • @colleenlally-ross7105
      @colleenlally-ross7105 Před 7 měsíci +1

      I take notes 😅

    • @avainvestmentanalytics
      @avainvestmentanalytics Před 6 měsíci

      I'm sorry you've been fooled by Wolff's nonsense. He's complete disinfo.

    • @jvs333
      @jvs333 Před 6 měsíci

      @@avainvestmentanalytics sorry you don't have the IQ to understand his broader overview thinking of economics.
      Two simple and very clear examples:
      1. US (capitalist): a deteriorating society, aging infrastructure, homelessness, dangerous dirty cities, poor education system, crime, violence, drugs, murders, poverty, unaffordable living, debt ridden, a populace in angst and worry, unsafe and hostile society, buried in "capitalist" debt, a government that is owned and controlled by the rich and their interests at the expense of the public.
      2. CHINA (socialist): a civilized society, modern state of the art infrastructure, safe clean cities, good education system, low crime, low violence, low drugs, affordable living, manageable debt (smart investments:BRI, infrastructure, education, business/enterprises), a government that places its interests in its people, society and country. Providing safe, functional, cities that offer opportunities for people.
      PS: you should read the comments you'd find you're in the very small minority with your opinion

    • @avainvestmentanalytics
      @avainvestmentanalytics Před 6 měsíci

      @@jvs333 I don't have the IQ huh? I have a Masters degree from UPenn in chemistry. You might want to investigate my research track record before making ridiculous statements. The fact is I am one of the very best analysts in the world today. Not only did I predict the details of the 2008 financial crisis with more accuracy than anyone, I also recommended Chinese equities 20 years ago. But I recognized when China was in trouble several years ago. China has seen its best days for various reasons. If you're a serious investor or scholar, you would benefit from my 5-hour webinar on China. As far as your rants, as a world-class analyst I don't engage in debates with novices in the fields. Ask your cult leader Wolff to debate me live on these issues on a neutral platform. He won't do it once he realizes who he's dealing with because he knows he can only fool the YT audience which is quite ignorant.

  • @dt0605
    @dt0605 Před rokem +7

    i am so glad that the PROFESSOR conclude that China is a mixed capitalist system, not a communist system. crazies from both extremes on china take note.

  • @sugarbeets
    @sugarbeets Před rokem +4

    This is a true & superb presentation to the world and more importantly to the American audience. Only those with a "One Way" mind won't listen to it.

  • @seanlee9377
    @seanlee9377 Před rokem +30

    A great piece of lecture highly beneficial to politicians on both sides of the globe.

  • @MichaelMyall
    @MichaelMyall Před 11 měsíci +4

    Purely brilliant. Thank you, Professor Wolff.

  • @robertyu8022
    @robertyu8022 Před rokem +75

    Very much appreciate the professor gives such a amazing lesson.

    • @rostomc
      @rostomc Před rokem +1

      Very good video and subjects

  • @tonypeterson5316
    @tonypeterson5316 Před rokem +30

    This guy really knows what he's talking about. The problem with US type of Capitalism is that they depend too much on the private sector, which is almost all "for profit". State owned businesses aren't always "for profit", some times they exist just to serve the people. Now I can see why medical fees and college tuitions are so much cheaper in China than the US.

    • @themarbleking
      @themarbleking Před rokem +2

      Its the same as all european colonies. Exploitative.

    • @genelarson6849
      @genelarson6849 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@themarbleking why are the GDP numbers of these countries so positive

  • @nibabusisay9766
    @nibabusisay9766 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Thank you so much for your deep insight into capitalism which was tracked back from the last 100 years and now seemingly exploited all means of existence as Capitalism.

  • @RandyHartono
    @RandyHartono Před rokem +3

    Incredible speech 🗨, analysis, understanding in a depths details... It's an enlightenment for the Leaders...

  • @ratnabahadurgurung9850
    @ratnabahadurgurung9850 Před rokem +7

    I would like to listen professor Richrd wollf lecture because prof.speaks very loudly, clearly, and truly about the amid situations. Thank you sir i appreciate a lot.

  • @vincentquintero6464
    @vincentquintero6464 Před rokem +51

    professor Wolf this talk was amazing more then other you gave us thanks Richard Wolf for all the years of your work.

  • @parttimethinker7611
    @parttimethinker7611 Před rokem +2

    The Roman, the Ottoman and many other past empires thought they were hitting home runs with their awesome decisions as they approached their final days they were too happy to have been able to brushed aside all the naysayers like you, Dr Wolff. They got a plan. And it’s only good for their people. We’re all out of luck, folks. Thanks for your dedication for humanity and for the working folks Doc. Good fortune to you.

  • @jonathankammer9078
    @jonathankammer9078 Před rokem +37

    I think this is the strongest lecture of yours that I’ve seen, and I’ve seen hundreds. Congratulations, and THANK YOU.

    • @jonathankammer9078
      @jonathankammer9078 Před rokem +2

      I shared with a comrade and he raised some a few minor quibbles, but also he did appreciate that Dr. Wolff basically said, “given all their success, are you as an American leftist seriously going to tell the Chinese they should change their system?” My comrade thinks you made a very neutral framing of the rise of China that didn’t make any commentary on the many global benefits of the rise like climate action, displacement of US imperial power, and third world industrialization. My comrade is not certain calling China an empire is fair, given China’s far more equitable treatment of smaller partner states. For example: no military interventions and more generous loan agreements; loan agreements that are sometimes forgiven and don’t require social austerity clauses, etc. These are serious distinctions between Chinese and US international economic policy, even if China has increasingly empire-like economic leverage potential. My comrade feels you mischaracterize Chinese cooperatives. Instead of celebrating more than 10% of the economy being worker cooperatives, you call for coops to cover the whole economy. My comrade is pretty sure that China has the most cooperative worker-owners of any other nation. If true, we don’t think it’s an insignificant or neglected sector of their economy. You also talked through a wide range of ratios for what the CPC originally envisioned for state vs. private enterprises, and my comrade said you vastly overestimated the amount of private enterprises that have ever existed in the PRC. We don’t know how he was measuring, but my comrade thinks the state sector still owns more than 80% of assets in their economy. My comrade isn’t a fan of the term “state capitalism,” since capitalism inherently means private ownership of the means of production, not democratic state control on behalf of the public trust. You also could have mentioned the McKinsey study last year that found China’s GDP was actually already 30% larger than the US’s…

  • @hsingchen5141
    @hsingchen5141 Před rokem +223

    A most enlightening lecture of immense importance to the present precarious world situation I have ever heard. Thank you so much, Professor.

    • @jaymarcase9737
      @jaymarcase9737 Před rokem +4

      Nice alliteration.

    • @holiday8473
      @holiday8473 Před 5 měsíci

      Hi, everyone! I am a worker with a Chinese "peasant identity" (under Chinese identity politics and household registration system, farmers are considered the lowest end of the population). After Professor Qin Hui's ideological enlightenment and awakening, I very agree with Professor Qin Hui's point of view: in the current context of globalization, the constitutional democratic system is being challenged by the autocratic Chinese model (that is, bad money drives out good money). Democratic countries around the world must deeply understand and understand the fact that since the CCP came into power in 1949, hundreds of millions of Chinese farmers have worked hard to pay public food, agricultural taxes The construction of water conservancy projects for free provided the CCP with the original financial accumulation at the beginning of the founding of the People's Republic of China. Under the family planning policy, Chinese farmers were forced to have abortions, ligation and ring fencing, and payment of fines for excess births. Farmers were restricted by the household registration system in rural areas and could not move freely, leading a serf like life. During the three-year period from 1959 to 1961, there were no natural disasters at all. It was entirely due to Mao Zedong's policies such as the "Great Leap Forward" and "Great Steel Refining" that local officials, in response to Mao Zedong's policies, falsely reported ultra-high grain yields and plundered the surplus food of farmers, which resulted in the tragic starvation of 40 million people in human history. The vast majority of these were farmers, At that time, not a single Communist official starved to death. After China's reform and opening up in 1980, the first generation of farmers went to cities to work as construction workers, sanitation workers, cleaners, and miners Waiting for the most tiring and dirty jobs, China joined the WTO in the early 21st century under the background of economic globalization. For example, the second generation of farmers entered red sweatshops as workers, manufacturing cheap goods for the world. Due to the lack of independent trade unions to fight for their legal rights, they could not enjoy social welfare benefits such as work-related injuries, unemployment, medical care, elderly care, housing, and children's education in urban areas, Their children were forced to return to rural areas for education due to their household registration as "farmers" and the "school district housing" system, resulting in the world's largest tragic situation of left behind children and elderly people living alone in rural areas in China. Nowadays, the first generation of farmers have become old and lose their ability to work. They are ruthlessly driven back to the countryside and struggle to make ends meet with a monthly pension of over 100 yuan. The minimum standard for urban household registration is over 2000 yuan per month, which is more than 20 times that of rural household registration. Communist Party officials enjoy privileges and benefits, and the annual medical and health expenses are as high as several million yuan. National level officials spend one billion yuan on tourism in a year. Due to the enormous sacrifices and contributions of these two generations of Chinese farmers, China has become the world's second-largest economy. However, the Chinese farmer group has received exploitation and negative welfare treatment time and time again in the process of national wealth distribution and redistribution, while civil servants and high-ranking officials within the Communist Party system enjoy privileges and high welfare treatment. The Communist Party government utilizes the advantage of low human rights and cheap labor to attract a large amount of international financial capital investment, making China the largest red sweatshop in the world. The reason why cheap goods made in China are popular worldwide is due to the "low human rights" and "negative welfare" of the Chinese "farmer identity" worker group. Even if they work overtime for extended periods of time every day, they barely survive with a meager income. To change the Communist Party government's use of the "low human rights" and "negative welfare" system of China's vast vulnerable group of farmers in unfair competition in the globalized trade market, democratic countries around the world have the responsibility to supervise and pressure the Chinese government to demand an increase in the human rights and social welfare protection of hundreds of millions of Chinese farmers and disadvantaged groups, in order to solve the problem of trade fairness under economic globalization. The trade sanctions imposed by the United States and anti-dumping measures by the European Union cannot solve the problem of trade deficits. If democratic countries believe that the human rights and welfare protection of hundreds of millions of Chinese farmers and vulnerable groups are not related to you, it will gradually lead to a decrease in the standards of wages and welfare protection for labor in democratic countries (such as left-wing political parties in the United States proposing policies to reduce social welfare protection), because although labor in various countries cannot move freely, But capital is profit driven and can flow freely. Which capitalist doesn't like a labor market like China without strong trade unions. If the human rights and welfare standards of Chinese "farmer identity" workers cannot be gradually raised to align with those of democratic countries, then the human rights and welfare standards of democratic countries' workers can only be gradually lowered to align with those of Chinese "farmer identity" workers (this can be seen from the documentary "American Factory"). Democratic countries around the world cannot turn a blind eye to the history of labor tears behind China's "peasant identity" after enjoying nearly 40 years of cheap goods and economic benefits made in China. Please stop having illusions about the CCP and implementing appeasement policies. While paying attention to the human rights of Xinjiang, Tibet, Hong Kong and people in exile, it is more important to pay attention to the human rights situation of all Chinese people, Only by constantly putting pressure on the CCP to improve the human rights of all Chinese people and the welfare protection of vulnerable groups, cultivate the rights awareness of Chinese citizens and taxpayers, help China establish free and independent trade unions, learn from the welfare accountability of Polish Solidarity Trade Union, force financial openness and budget transparency, will China gradually embark on the path of constitutional democracy. A free and democratic China is indispensable for the stability and peace of the world, and it is also a responsibility that democratic countries around the world cannot evade, because we are all citizens of the Earth. I hope that people with conscience around the world can work together to make constitutional democracy overcome dictatorship, let good currency overcome bad currency, and make this world more civilized.

  • @marjaashamalla2902
    @marjaashamalla2902 Před rokem +19

    An excellent lecture! Thank you , Professor Wolff!

  • @treefrog3349
    @treefrog3349 Před rokem +78

    The truly terrifying things is what happens when the hegemony of the "richest and most powerful nation that ever was" is threatened by ANYONE? Considering America's arrogant belligerence on the World stage for all of my 73 years of life, I am guessing it won't be good.

    • @sickg6417
      @sickg6417 Před rokem +2

      back then, Sun Never Sets British Empire was also "richest and most powerful nation that ever was" at that time
      but she caved in eventually
      like major conflict brits vs the US as in American Revolutionary War, major conflict between Chinese and the US also happened already in Korean peninsula and Vietnam
      event similar to White House Burning is happening in Taiwan island right now
      so according to history, I don't think anything major would occur after the Taiwan issue all settling down

    • @beastmode8203
      @beastmode8203 Před rokem +1

      @@sickg6417 you will get a nuclear war over the United States Global position.

    • @beastmode8203
      @beastmode8203 Před rokem

      @@armamentarmedarm1699 and if China surpasses us we're going to do it.

    • @dodododatdatdat
      @dodododatdatdat Před rokem +3

      @@sickg6417 I agree, empires rise and fall, the elephant in the room is nuclear

    • @The.world.has.gone.crazy...
      @The.world.has.gone.crazy... Před rokem

      I hope the collapse of the usa is soon. Its the biggest maffia, terrorist state to ever exist.

  • @ratnabahadurgurung9850
    @ratnabahadurgurung9850 Před rokem +14

    Listenable lectured by prof. Richard Wolff thankyou verymuch sir.

  • @manuelvarela9473
    @manuelvarela9473 Před rokem +3

    Thank you for pointing out all what you talked about.Keep it up.

  • @normalizedinsanity4873
    @normalizedinsanity4873 Před rokem +58

    Paraphrasing here: Back in 1928, Leon Trotsky noted that when the USA enters its inevitable period of crisis, it will be ruthless in attempting to maintain its hegemony by any means necessary and against any nation, which will engender convulsions across the planet that will threaten our very existence. This assessment is based on the size of the US economy.
    The recently deceased Prof Zbigniew Brezenski's "The Grand Chessboard" (the skunk that gave us the Mujahadeen) is the blueprint for the invasion of the Middle East and cites the invasion and control of Afghanistan and Ukraine as imperatives in the quest to control the regions vast resources. Just before he died, he said the lack of sufficient boots on the ground in the invasion's initial phase compromised the mission from the start that is now unwinnable.
    While the British ceded hegemony to the US without conflict, the US has no intention of doing the same and is in no position to do so. It's not 1947 when capitalist expansion was still possible, and the resources were available. Its 1939 and a world of economic crisis, tariffs, growing instability and hostility between competing nation states, and the complete breakdown of the post-war mechanisms meant to avoid the conditions developing that set off both global conflicts. Ukraine and its people are sacrificed fighting a proxy war as the US plans to break up the Russian Federation and take control of its resources. To believe they will stop there would be a grave mistake; they have China firmly in their sites.
    Once again, and for the last time the question is posed; Socialism or barbarism?

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Před rokem

      >1928....when the USA enters its inevitable period of crisis,
      Early Christians waited in forest clearings for the 2nd Comning. Very sadly, they are still waiting.

    • @alanOHALAN
      @alanOHALAN Před rokem +1

      I agreed that Leon Trotsky was the true ideological successor of Lenin, and Stalin was the root of the socialism decline. Soviet Union was the 1st attempt and failed ultimately because the course had been altered by Stalin.

    • @Bisquick
      @Bisquick Před rokem

      @@TeaParty1776 Except for it did...ever heard of the great depression? lol...
      History time if what Normalized Insanity here is saying is flying over your head:
      The US is the global hegemon and has positioned itself as the "consumer of last resort" at the end of the global supply chain (which we enforce/coerce militarily/financially) to absorb inevitable overproduction of capitalism (which causes the hundreds of "panics" throughout the 19th and early 20th century - in their time often known as the "great depression" until the one from 1929 onward was recorded permanently) through cheap consumption or of course through our favorite activity of war and arms sales (military Keynesianism, the only button we can push at this point clearly).
      We accomplish this through the Bretton-Woods international financial system, leveraged by the US post-WWII by being the only industrialized nation-state _not_ bombed to shit and effectively taking the imperial baton from the British and their pound sterling, cementing the dollar as the "global reserve currency" and through the IMF/World Bank and its post-71 (Nixon shock) -debt peonage/resource/labor control austerity policy- "structural adjustment" programs lend capital in dollar loans under the stipulation of absolute control of labor/markets/resources by US capital, "an offer they can't refuse" - any nation-states refusing to bend the knee like Cuba (see: Operation Mongoose, Northwoods, etc), Venezuela (sitting on the largest oil reserve in the world, what a coincidence), Iran (which we couped in '53 installing the Shah to prevent oil nationalization, shocker, Operation AJAX), et al. of course gets unilaterally sanctioned and excluded from the global trade network run at our behest at the minimum, but also perpetually coup-ed by the CIA or just overtly invaded, tracking the CIA's "regime change" operational history will reveal this grotesque rise of empire akin to the optimates of the late Roman empire but with guns and nukes. Red scare(s)/Taft-Hartley have hollowed out the heart and soul of labor power in the US provided by the New Deal and as a result, much like your populares movement of the Gracchi bros and later Caesar being crushed by that Roman oligarchy for crossing the actual rubicon of debt cancellation and land redistribution, much like the rhetorical adoption of Christianity to quell the ideological alignment _against_ the Roman occupation that Jesus brought about leading to its eventual _ACTUAL_ dissolution, you have an empire desperately lashing out to maintain its gradually waning influence. This is how capitalism "works". Cui Bono? Who benefits? Reminded of Michael Parenti, an excerpt from his piece Mystery: How Wealth Creates Poverty:
      _In their perpetual confusion, some liberal critics conclude that foreign aid and IMF and World Bank structural adjustments “do not work”; the end result is less self-sufficiency and more poverty for the recipient nations, they point out. Why then do the rich member states continue to fund the IMF and World Bank? Are their leaders just less intelligent than the critics who keep pointing out to them that their policies are having the opposite effect?_
      _No, it is the critics who are stupid not the western leaders and investors who own so much of the world and enjoy such immense wealth and success. They pursue their aid and foreign loan programs because such programs do work. The question is, work for whom? Cui bono?_
      _The purpose behind their investments, loans, and aid programs is not to uplift the masses in other countries. That is certainly not the business they are in. The purpose is to serve the interests of global capital accumulation, to take over the lands and local economies of Third World peoples, monopolize their markets, depress their wages, indenture their labor with enormous debts, privatize their public service sector, and prevent these nations from emerging as trade competitors by not allowing them a normal development._
      _In these respects, investments, foreign loans, and structural adjustments work very well indeed._
      _The real mystery is: why do some people find such an analysis to be so improbable, a “conspiratorial” imagining? Why are they skeptical that U.S. rulers knowingly and deliberately pursue such ruthless policies (suppress wages, rollback environmental protections, eliminate the public sector, cut human services) in the Third World? These rulers are pursuing much the same policies right here in our own country!_
      _Isn’t it time that liberal critics stop thinking that the people who own so much of the world---and want to own it all---are “incompetent” or “misguided” or “failing to see the unintended consequences of their policies”? You are not being very smart when you think your enemies are not as smart as you. They know where their interests lie, and so should we._
      It's no coincidence that our bipartisan blackhole "defense" budget passes with ease to implicitly/explicitly enforce this now global financial "order" through the 1,000+ military bases worldwide and toward the perpetual benefit of US corporate/finance capital at the zero-sum cost of the working class (not to mention the planet that we're consciously destroying at this point...), meanwhile a modest domestic spending bill or god forbid even the most basic of healthcare for the people that actually make this world produce any sort of life worth living is callously thrown at the wayside.
      The empire feeds off the republic, hollowing out all social meaning and trust to be sold for profit and leading to an ouroboros of resentment and a headlong thanatos embrace toward the "common ruin of the contending classes." To echo Rosa Luxemburg from 1918 Germany as Normalized insanity here invoked, before of course being executed by the freikorps paramilitary (later becoming the SS, shocker) at the behest of Ebert's ostensibly _social democratic_ SPD party (the party itself split with the international socialists over the decision of war credits for WWI; ain't no war but the class war), almost immediately resonating the truth of such a succinct political dichotomy to this day; juxtaposing that specter haunting the modern world with its only alternative:
      *_Socialism or_* [continued] *_barbarism._*

    • @Bisquick
      @Bisquick Před rokem

      @@alanOHALAN You gotta wonder though, what happens then with WWII? The USSR sacrificing 27 million to halt nazi Germany's advance. Not disagreeing necessarily, but I think it's a bit more complicated. No doubt Stalin wasn't a "good" guy of course, but as Prof.Wolff gets at in the beginning here I'm not trying to dictate history through a normative lens with this minor skeptical contention, merely a material one, the "is" and not the "ought" as Hume would put it. Obviously such a counterfactual makes it impossible to say, but uhh well I guess that's my point lol, who knows.
      But yes, you are def correct in that Lenin did _not_ want Stalin to take over citing his quenching for power as the reason why which no doubt was a huge and tainting part of his dominion.
      _"Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past. The tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the living."_ - some guy

    • @Bisquick
      @Bisquick Před rokem

      ​@@alanOHALAN If you haven't heard it already, I found this a humorous look into Stalin's life and his paranoiac (justifiably in some narrow cases, though to an enormous fault however obviously) dictatorship from a historical materialist perspective (and the book Young Stalin by Simon Sebag if I recall):
      czcams.com/video/qs_viRxyzPA/video.html

  • @Mimi-uz2yg
    @Mimi-uz2yg Před rokem +19

    what an amazing talk about current situation we are in by Prof. Wolff! Thank you!

  • @VICE-H3RO
    @VICE-H3RO Před rokem +5

    I listened to this video from start to finish. An Amazing and insightful lecture professor Wolff, your historical context & analogies made me understand this situation better.

  • @irasemacarlvi5310
    @irasemacarlvi5310 Před rokem +6

    Best explanation of the world economic situation EVER! Thank you, Sir!

  • @robertivan8008
    @robertivan8008 Před rokem +80

    I just want to say in general: Thank you Prof. Wolff, it is a pleasure to listen to your thoughts and knowledge. Please continue in doing that work. It is necessary, that people like you are explaining their expertise. You don't have to, but that you do that, I am very thankful. 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @parthoprotimganguly2125
    @parthoprotimganguly2125 Před rokem +24

    Sir, I wish , I could be your student. Now I 62
    ...Pl sir keep it up. People's love and God's blessings will be with you.

  • @sepam82
    @sepam82 Před rokem +2

    Very enlightening especially the mention of trying to resolve the differences in the systems inorder to ensure we can live in peace. Please do not insist your ways are better than others and try to export your systems causing sufferings for everyone. I like to thank Prof Richard Wolff for this last part.

  • @g.m.8360
    @g.m.8360 Před rokem +33

    This is the best and most comprehensive lecture I have heard from the professor on this subject it’s like a parent trying to talk their grown up child he sees the patterns there that most people refuse to believe the writing on the wall

  • @rabbitazteca23
    @rabbitazteca23 Před rokem +34

    I LOVE LOVE your channel. Your insights are really phenomenal

    • @jamesdivine69
      @jamesdivine69 Před rokem

      Yes, I LOVE LOVE his work sooo much to. Let's suck him OFF OFF together

  • @itsthatsem
    @itsthatsem Před 4 měsíci +2

    This distinguished gentleman deserves all the respect a man can get. His acute observation, knowledge and vast insights are outstanding. Facts. Pure unfiltered facts that we all will never encounter on any mainstream Western media. Salute you Sir!🫡

  • @alandoane9168
    @alandoane9168 Před rokem +34

    I don't know which is more astonishing, the logic and significance of the information Professor Wolff shares here, or the profound ignorance most people have about these momentous events that we are witnessing in our lifetime.

    • @beastmode8203
      @beastmode8203 Před rokem

      You're going to witness World War 3. The United States will absolutely not no matter what except second to China that's not an option. You will get the most horrible apocalyptic outcome you could ever fathom.

    • @harbhajandosanjh634
      @harbhajandosanjh634 Před rokem +6

      Because you folks have left in dark. One word was taught to you 🤣😅
      USA ,USA , USA. While you guys are chanting this the Imperialism was stealing from you and getting richer every passing minute.

    • @bugsbunny4647
      @bugsbunny4647 Před rokem

      @@harbhajandosanjh634 Surely, this isn't being said in malice. You know majority of his viewers [Prof. Wolff] are anti-imperialist communists, right?

    • @lexneuron
      @lexneuron Před rokem +1

      If people are ignorant of some momentous events, then those people would not be witnessing it.
      Or should it be so understood as that "most people" are not witnessing what "we" are witnessing, which then poses a question: Who is this "we" as referred to?

  • @antonykalawangi7538
    @antonykalawangi7538 Před rokem +16

    Thank you so much professor for educating and enlightening me with your awesome and world-class lecture. Thanks once again, prof!

  • @albertolee6867
    @albertolee6867 Před 11 měsíci +5

    One of your best lectures. Thank you Prof Wolff.

  • @treefrog3349
    @treefrog3349 Před rokem +6

    It is a "refreshing" experience to hear someone speak objective truths rather than partisan political pullshit.

  • @titseramboy6216
    @titseramboy6216 Před rokem +11

    Thank you so much again and again, pf a very profound presentation! Rest assured that we will spread your golden thought.

  • @ginabelous3188
    @ginabelous3188 Před rokem +23

    Thank you professor for your words of wisdom. Well said!

  • @1809steph
    @1809steph Před rokem +15

    Brilliant as always. , professor Wolff .

  • @ralok1968
    @ralok1968 Před rokem +31

    Highly impressive. Best lecture yet to date. Nice job Professor Wolff ..Thank you!

  • @denisdecharmoy
    @denisdecharmoy Před 11 měsíci +4

    Thanks for the most interesting talk I've heard over the last 10 years. Blessings from Durban, South Africa

  • @GenXPiper
    @GenXPiper Před rokem +61

    Wow! Damn well put together. Highly impressive. Best lecture yet to date. Nice job Professor Wolff thank you!

  • @seventian6117
    @seventian6117 Před rokem +5

    Chinese rural population each owns a piece of farmland, a piece of residence land and a share in village's collective capital, these rights can't be sold.

    • @EarlHayward
      @EarlHayward Před rokem

      Pretty sure that has changed... From what I recall, some of those land rights can be sold and/or leased with benefits going to the village/people... In part, to facilitate larger scale farming where villages can even get together, or to help fund the move of people to more urban areas. Also, I thought the land controlled by the village/people was reallocated every ten years (and technically owned by the State unless sold)... But, not keeping up with as much since it has been 4-5 years since I lived in China. Nonetheless, the changes and impact of policies by Deng Xiaoping and Chen Yun have had great impact and I don't see much likelihood of roll-backs...

  • @tompham637
    @tompham637 Před rokem +21

    Well said, professor !

  • @nickchua1165
    @nickchua1165 Před rokem +7

    Thank You Sir, watching n widening our horizons, hope world can come together

  • @anhedonic-voting
    @anhedonic-voting Před rokem +8

    Thank you🌎✊🗽🌹
    This lecture truly needs to be heard by all especially now as unionization is slowly growing in support across the United States and South America is becoming more consolidated against the US government's corporate pressures. The China model in policies is also emerging in Africa as well but at a much slower rate. I do not believe in competition for economic gain but unfortunately it feels as though we are all trapped in this vicious cycle of competing rather than growing together for the prosperity of all.

  • @chtan69
    @chtan69 Před rokem +10

    Wow, really well put together and an eyes opener.

  • @johannbrauer9285
    @johannbrauer9285 Před rokem +9

    Another fantastic video from Prof. Wolf!!!

  • @fishoverseasable
    @fishoverseasable Před rokem +7

    Private owned system provides incentive for people to actively participate in the economic development, but it cannot solve the problem of equality. While the state owned system pay attention to the equal distribution of the wealth, but it lacks incentive motivation for people to earn more money since everyone will get the same amount

  • @eliyahubenysrael6272
    @eliyahubenysrael6272 Před rokem +10

    Thank you professor Wolf!

  • @basheersujeevanam6319
    @basheersujeevanam6319 Před rokem +14

    Excellent and lucid style. Thank you.

  • @truthaboveall7988
    @truthaboveall7988 Před rokem +22

    Ray Dalio’s latest book Principles for dealing w a changing world order is incredible & worth reading

    • @beastmode8203
      @beastmode8203 Před rokem

      Read the Doomsday machine because that's the outcome you're going to get if they surpass the United States. ☢️

  • @homan2329
    @homan2329 Před rokem +13

    I am British and to name us as poodle of the United States is inaccurate, it infers to a much loved pet . We are no even that we are more like lackeys , a playground bully’s sidekick . The one that shouts the loudest and puffs their chest out when the bully beats up a helpless victim .

    • @robbiewizz658
      @robbiewizz658 Před rokem

      My thoughts exactly and Ukraine is the other runty member of the gang who being egged on to start trouble with the rival hard boy in the other class… So when he retaliated the 3 of them can join in and fight him…

    • @reptilexcq2
      @reptilexcq2 Před rokem

      Puppet of the US today, how's that sound?

  • @terrywong7879
    @terrywong7879 Před rokem +8

    Thank You Dr Wolff, Interesting lecture.

  • @yonggeorgeyinsoon5411
    @yonggeorgeyinsoon5411 Před rokem +7

    Remarkable speech, thank you!

  • @joselhernandez8824
    @joselhernandez8824 Před rokem +13

    Thank you for your wisdom.

  • @jonpierson5187
    @jonpierson5187 Před rokem +29

    Good conversion like usual. Our world is changing, thanks

    • @beastmode8203
      @beastmode8203 Před rokem

      Changing for the worst, you better pray they don't surpass the US otherwise it's fucking over ☢️

    • @nihleigleca6702
      @nihleigleca6702 Před rokem +1

      Not necessarily for the better...... we have to bring the change we desire.

    • @grizzlycharizard0017
      @grizzlycharizard0017 Před rokem +1

      @@nihleigleca6702 Yes we need to get arid of Capitalism.

    • @nihleigleca6702
      @nihleigleca6702 Před rokem

      @@grizzlycharizard0017 With clear, viable options to replace it, yes. That is many people's wish, myself included. But Communism requires more than youtube comments you know.

  • @geoffreylee5753
    @geoffreylee5753 Před rokem +3

    Thank you Professor Wolff, for such an comprehensive lecture! I've learned a lot!

  • @jimmylee1776
    @jimmylee1776 Před rokem +5

    Thank you Professor for this video. Socialism is what the world needs. Going back a few centuries when human societies were hunter gatherers. The men goes out hunting & returned to their village & shared what they caught with the families in the village. There was no big gap between the rich & the poor. Everyone was equal. Then when human being learned to farm, everyone in the village shared the farm work & shared the grains they harvested. All these change when as we evolved with land ownership etc - we have private land ownership & private enterprise. The society became divided - the rich & the poor. Evolution of society to capitalism today, the capitalist put in the capital to start a business & took the risk of losing the capital. Therefore they expect a good profit or certain amount of return on their capital. To make the profit the capitalists have to reduce their production cost. They pay employees as low as possible, depending on the the supply & demand for labour. Many unskilled people work as labourers & earn wages that are barely adequate to live on. Many such low income people need 2 jobs to survive. In many countries there are laws regulating minimum wages to prevent exploitation of labour. Societies have evolved & many countries’ economies embraced capitalism. Countries with good governments are socialistic & have many social programs. In Australia we have laws regulating minimum wage. We have many good social programs, for example:
    - Medicare to assist payment of medical expenses
    - Subsidised pharmaceuticals for pensioners. The cost of medicines are largely reduced.
    - HECS (Higher Education Contribution) system. Any citizen attending university can apply for HECS. The government provides a loan to the students to pay for their fees. The loan is interest free. After graduation the students repay the government, when their salary reaches a certain level
    We are lucky in Australia.
    I think the US & other countries can learn from our system.

  • @petkuscinta9797
    @petkuscinta9797 Před rokem +3

    I did not know that USA under Rosevelt was running (in principle) the same system that we had under Socialism in Czechoslovakia where local money was basically similar to Roosevelt's stamps.

  • @sethbrown1763
    @sethbrown1763 Před rokem +9

    Thank you for this lecture. Very enlightening. I will, of course, have to listen to it again because it was very intricate. Also, I'm tired :)

  • @loranelizabeth9148
    @loranelizabeth9148 Před rokem +8

    Well done!

  • @OP-mz3hr
    @OP-mz3hr Před rokem +10

    Very insightful. Thank you so much for sharing your lecture

  • @knowing1100
    @knowing1100 Před rokem +1

    I was from the first major world empire, now live in Australia. Hope we will be able to developed a world system as one country. This is the safest for human survival in

  • @ncalliance2530
    @ncalliance2530 Před rokem +12

    Very detailed and informative speech, tks

  • @antonlavrentiev5249
    @antonlavrentiev5249 Před rokem +20

    Thank you for the stream

  • @longyou8254
    @longyou8254 Před rokem +6

    Great analysis

  • @kaienglee5319
    @kaienglee5319 Před rokem +2

    Thank you, Professor Wolff, for the enlightening talk.

  • @howardlandman6121
    @howardlandman6121 Před rokem +5

    "We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. But so, once, did the divine right of kings." - Ursula K. Leguin

  • @coolcat15
    @coolcat15 Před rokem +32

    What a great presentation, what a great statement! Thank you very much.

  • @MarcoPolo-hn8or
    @MarcoPolo-hn8or Před rokem +32

    Well said Professor 👏👏👏👏

  • @yahorkazlou6313
    @yahorkazlou6313 Před rokem +5

    Big thanks. As a bonus a great intro into dialectics included ;)

  • @demonslayer1196
    @demonslayer1196 Před rokem +11

    The mark of a good professor is wisdom with wielding knowledge, depth of understanding, impartiality in perspective, a style of communication and education that is easily understood, a gift for dispelling controversy and a motivation for the common good. Prof Wolff, congratulations.

    • @bluewater454
      @bluewater454 Před rokem

      😂😂😂😂😂😂
      Now that is just funny. Thanks for the laugh comrade.

    • @Bahar5558
      @Bahar5558 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@bluewater454 Go BRICS!!!!❤

    • @bluewater454
      @bluewater454 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Bahar5558 Whatever floats your boat comrade. You do you.
      🍻

  • @arefinhoosain654
    @arefinhoosain654 Před rokem +3

    Thanks a lot for educating & enlightened us with your grate lecture.

  • @romkoh
    @romkoh Před rokem +9

    Dr. Wolf - Congratulations to your fantastic presentation.
    What you described as the China system - is exactly what the former Singapore Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew employed to make the country of Singapore what it is today. Please do make a study of it, and you will find the source.
    For many years, Mr. Lee enjoyed a close working relationship with all the top leaders of China and during that time there is a possibility of notes were taken along the way.
    Thank you once again for sharing your presentation. Cheers

  • @cev12
    @cev12 Před rokem +7

    I think America's in decline based on the way it treats its citizens. Right now, Jerome Powell is trying to bring down workers' wages, as though we're not already struggling. But overall, it's the whole picture of economic inequality. They say Rome's decline was shown in it's excesses, and you see that now with the US' wealthy and powerful.

  • @kingho678
    @kingho678 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Thank you Professor for a profound and penetrating lecture.
    I hope USA is listening to you. Then, the world would be a much better place to live in.

  • @allantay9020
    @allantay9020 Před rokem +7

    What a amazing show !👍

  • @curiouspeople6441
    @curiouspeople6441 Před rokem +8

    Great insight, learned a great deal today

  • @treefrog3349
    @treefrog3349 Před rokem +8

    China, an ancient, learned and wise entity as opposed to the the USA and Russia, both juvenile "upstarts" in world History. It recalls a humorous story : a young bull and an old bull stand atop a hill overlooking a field of heifers. Young bull : "Dad let's run down there and have us a heifer". Old bull : son, let's WALK down there and have then ALL"..

    • @beastmode8203
      @beastmode8203 Před rokem

      Dude if China surpasses us you'll get Thucydide's trap and a nuclear war.

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 Před rokem

      That nonsense tale is an old stupid ditty which juveniles relate with a snigger. Grow up !

  • @clemalford9768
    @clemalford9768 Před rokem +1

    Great lecture. Many thanks. My late Indian historian friend Dipten Banerjee, who 40 years ago often talked about India following the Chinese economic model you spoke of. He was interested in the Asiatic modes of production which Marx touched on in his writing but died before completion. In West Bengal in the 1960s and 1970s there was a lot of leftist activity with a Marxist Leninist party in state power. And also a lot of Chinese inspired Naxalite activity. Banerjee often spoke of the idea of 'bypassing' the classical development theory of moving from feudalism to capitalism to Socialism.
    Alas the 'bypass' has not happened in India but looking at China's success might be a way to go for certain countries.