Aging Populations and Which Countries Look the Worst

Note: This video was recorded during Peter’s last hiking trip

Many countries are on the brink of crisis. No, I’m not talking about political issues or potential wars. Instead, I’m looking at the aging population crisis facing a number of countries around the globe. Let’s start with Japan.

Japan is the oldest country globally, with 10% of its population over 80, yet they’ve managed to mitigate the impact this has had. The Japanese have adopted policies that extend working lives, improve health care, and encourage younger generations to have children…and there are plenty of other countries who could take some lessons out of Japan’s playbook.

Italy and Germany are aging more rapidly and could put some strain on the European monetary union. China could very well face a civilization crashing event due to its inability to handle its older population with poor social security and weak health care system. Korea is also aging quickly, but I’m optimistic about their ability to innovate their way out of this pickle.

While there’s not a lot of positive in this one, those countries that are bit behind in the aging process will at least have some guinea pigs. And If anyone is looking for a career with solid job security, I suggest pursuing something in hospice or elderly care…

Transcript

Hey, everybody. Hello from Lewis Creek. Today we’re going to talk about demographics, specifically old people. The stereotypical case is Japan, where today 10% of the population is over 80 and fully one quarter of the population is either retired or qualifies for retirement. They are by far the oldest country in the world. However, they saw this coming back in the 1980s after having a birth rate that had been really low for nearly a century. 

And so they started extending working lives, better health care to make people keep their minds rather than fall into dementia, better child care. So the people who do want to have kids can try, and above all, ways to keep older folks at least engage part time within the workforce. All of that has allowed them to extend the useful working life of your average citizen, while also increasing the birth rate to a degree that they are no longer the fastest aging society in the world. 

There are now, like 20 other countries that are aging faster, including Thailand, Korea, China, Italy, Germany, Spain, Poland. It’s not that these countries are past the point of no return, but it’s time for them to start thinking about what happens next. Because while they may have seen this coming decades ago. They haven’t done squat about it. A couple of countries to keep your eyes on. 

Number one Italy. Here is a large country with an ancient population that’s getting older by the second. The oldest in Europe, and they’re in a monetary union with the rest of the Europeans. At some point, the additional outlays that are required to maintain an elderly population are going to crack the European system apart. Germany is just a couple of years behind Italy. 

So we’re going to see the Germans go from a minute payer of Europe to a net pay. That changes everything about what makes Europe work. Another country to watch is China. Every time they update their data, it gets worse and they may well now have a demographic structure that’s not too far behind Italy. And this is a country that doesn’t have a social security or pension system worth knowing, or a decent health care system. 

So when this goes, you basically had the Chinese lose their entire workforce in a very short period of time. I would expect that to be a civilization crashing event. And then finally there’s Korea, which is also aging very, very quickly. Maybe even just a touch faster than Italy. The reason I would say Watch Korea is if any country can figure out how to adapt to this, it’s the Koreans. 

This is the country that when they decided to get into the supertanker business, didn’t bother building a supertanker drydock. First they built the supertanker in two halves, in two different drydock and then welded together. The Koreans have a habit of defying physics to make things happen. And if anyone can find a path out of this, it’s them.

The Fire Hose of Chaos: The “Deal” With the Chinese

Trade tensions are taking their toll on an already fragile Chinese system. The US is dealing with self-sufficiency problems, but for China, it is an existential question. Will this new deal change that?

The Chinese economy relies on cheap capital to keep people employed and distracted; the idea is that social stability will keep people busy enough to avoid unrest. Surprise, surprise, that system is unsustainable. Throw in all the other issues plaguing China and you get a sticky situation. Now, enter Trump.

Round after round of extreme tariffs might be hurting American consumers, but that’s nothing compared to the death blow it is dealing to China. The entire Chinese model depends on exports, especially to the US, and the rest of the world can’t make up for that. But this new deal that’s emerged has walked back tariffs a bit (even if it’s largely symbolic).

This temporary relief from the tariffs will buy China a little time, but the fundamental issues haven’t changed. Oh, and the US is still going to get hit with a recession. Sorry to burst your bubbles.

Transcript

Hey, all. Peter Zeihan here coming to you from the car. The snow is gone. So that means it’s hiking season. 

The first stop is, Utah. Anyway, we’ll be doing some more pieces as the trip continues. But right now, we need to get back to China. So we have seen a number of policy shifts out of the Trump administration in its first few months in office. 

And by far the most significant one is, of course, in trade. And we’ve spent the last couple of weeks going through the impacts of that on the US economy, and now we’re going to shift to the second largest economy in the world, which is the People’s Republic. The situation here is not minor. I mean, in the United States, we have been on the edge about industrial production and import self-sufficiency and all those good things that are worth having conversations about. 

But for China, the situation is far more existential. You see, the Chinese economic system is based on political stability. The, bribing the population. Basically, anyone who has cash, whether it’s a central bank or a mom and pop operation, that cash is forced into certain investment vehicles so that there can be cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, subsidized cheap capital available for any entity that is capable of employing anyone. 

The theory is pretty straightforward. China has a history of being part of the region’s coming, their way of rebellions, and since the system has never had a way to transfer power from one generation to another, that has really worked. The best way to make sure that everything holds is to make sure that everyone is gainfully employed and it doesn’t have to be a real job. 

It just has to be something that keeps people doing something for most of the week so that they don’t get together in large groups and go on long walks together. Something the Chinese government is very familiar with because that’s exactly how they got their jobs anyway. So the capital structure is deliberately tilted towards this sort of robust, artificially cheap capital system. 

It means that the rate of returns on capital are very low, which means the entire system is kind of creaking along everyone’s style. But it means everybody’s got a job. The thing is, is if you invest a bottomless supply of someone else’s money into an industrial plant, it’s not going to be particularly efficient. And B is going to produce a lot of stuff that is not geared towards the local economy. 

And C, the local economy doesn’t have the capital that it would be needed to purchase it anyway. And that’s before you consider China’s demographic problems. Now, that they have more people over age 53 than under 53. Simply having consumption at all is kind of hilarious and so no shock. 

We’ve actually seen consumption go down in the last six years. One of the fun things about Covid is it kind of put everything on hiatus for a few years in China, because of the lockdowns, and none of the statistics really matched up with what we had before. And it’s only in the last 18 months that that’s far enough in the rearview mirror that we have some idea of what the numbers actually look like in China, and they’re all really bad. 

So along comes Trump and puts up a series of tariffs that basically function as an embargo, 185% was the peak in that sort of environment. Trade between the United States and China basically arrests. And while that is a problem in the United States, from a consumer point of view, it will absolutely trigger a recession in China. It’s the kiss of death, because the United States is China’s number one consumer of Chinese exports. 

Exports that they can’t consume themselves, which means that China has to be export lead no matter what else, because it can’t consume the stuff itself. Now they will they have they will continue to try to dump that product on other markets to get the income. But the rest of the world combined simply doesn’t have enough spare consumption to absorb what once went to the United States. 

And that’s before you consider that a lot of these countries are becoming more protectionist anyway as the world globalized. So you dump the product, they start putting up their own tariffs. We saw that last year with the electric vehicle craze, where the United States was one of the first countries to put up barriers, but then the Europeans followed the Canadian style. 

Basically, anyone who has an auto industry at all, including the Brazilians and the Indonesians and the Russians, and we basically just saw China cut out of all of the markets, and they started chopping up the cars to get the battery packs to put into other things. We’re gonna look at something like that on a much larger scale this year, and we’re already hearing reports of companies closing, factories shutting down, warehouses already being full across the length and the breadth of the Chinese system. 

Not so much in electronics, because the Trump administration issued a waiver for that specific subcategory. But that’s only about a fifth to a quarter of the products that the Chinese used to produce. So there is no version of the deal that the Trump administration would accept that addresses the issue as Trump defines it. And that’s a trade deficit issue that would also allow the Chinese to solve their problems in the way that they define it, which is a mass employment and export problem. 

So we really do have the irresistible force meeting a unmovable object here, and there’s no clean way forward. And yet and yet and yet a couple of days ago, we got a deal. Well, let me explain what that deal was. The deal is to dial back most of the tariffs to roughly where they were the day before Trump announced Liberation Day. 

And that’s the entire. Oh, and this is exactly what we should expect from the American side, because the Trump administration still wants it hasn’t staffed up. And your typical real trade deal with a country that does not have an agricultural sector or anything particularly sensitive, which to say that China takes about 18 months and we’re only getting started on this process. 

What the Chinese are hoping for is they can do some version of a repeat of the phase one trade deal that was done by the Trump administration the first time around, and in that deal, there were product quotas. There were changes to intellectual property laws. There’s a long list of things that the Americans considered irritants in the relationship that the Chinese agreed to. 

And so they signed a deal and then ignored it completely because the Trump administration had no bandwidth to actually enforce the deal. And things just went on their way this time around, the Trump administration doesn’t have 5% of the senior staff that it had last time. One of the reasons it’s taking us so long, just to get to the point where they’ve agreed to talk, is that there’s no one on the US side to even answer the phone, and so real talks maybe will now begin. 

And if the real talks follow the pattern last time, it’ll be a year before we get the phase one trade deal that the Chinese will then proceed to ignore. The Chinese are betting that the Trump administration is bad with so slow out of the political environment at home is so toxic that the Trump administration will simply be tangled up in other things, and they can go back to some version of what they would consider normal, which is where they were on April 1st. 

Now, does this save the Chinese system? God, no. Everything about the Chinese system is terminal. The demographics alone suggest that this is a country with, at best, eight years to run. And we’ve already had a number of trade policies out of the Trump administration targeting China. We are now in our 128. Oh my God, a trade policy. All for all for this administration. 

So the rules are changing. Investment is stalled in the United States because nobody knows what to do. But as far as the Chinese are concerned, this does give them a little bit more bandwidth, allows them to stall and perhaps a little bit more. If the 145% tariffs would have stuck, we would’ve been looking at for maybe five years. 

Tops of the Chinese system could exist before the employment system simply imploded on them. They needed something, and the Trump administration has given them something. The question is, how long will it last until we have our next hiccup at the white House? 

Oh, and one more thing. This doesn’t deflect the, forecast that I have of a recession in the United States at all. Assuming that Trump means what he said with the return to some version of normal tariffs that we had a few weeks ago, and assuming that everyone in China gets right back to work immediately, and assuming that all of the ships that haven’t crossed the Pacific are still there waiting. 

And remember, we’ve had three times as many ship cancellations on the Trans-Pacific route so far as we did during all of Covid times. Three assuming everything goes back to normal. The first product that leaves China now isn’t going to actually hit shelves throughout the United States until the first week of October. So we have at least been where we have a problem with inflation, where we have a problem with lack of growth. 

And that’s before you consider all the other factors that are going on, because it’s just this is just one thing, that has changed a little bit and everything else is going full bore.

The Fire Hose of Chaos: Chinese Edition Intro

Chinese flag over a building

Today, we’re launching into the next phase of our “Fire Hose of Chaos” series, shifting our focus from the US and onto China. Trust me, there will be no shortage of chaos in this series either.

The Chinese have built themselves up to be one of the most powerful countries in the world, but there are cracks in the foundation. The demographic issue is the largest crack, thanks to rapid industrialization, urbanization, and the one-child policy. And then the other issues start to pile on.

An aging and shrinking workforce has left Chinese manufacturing uncompetitive. Decades of financial mismanagement has created a fragile and unsustainable economy. Chinese agriculture is massively inefficient. And don’t get me started on the Yuan and the capital situation.

Get ready for a whole lot of dysfunction and chaos, because China was heading towards this scary collapse long before Trump came into the picture.

Transcript

Hey all. Peter Zeihan here come to you from Colorado. For the last couple of weeks, we’ve been doing a series. I’ve been calling the Fire Hose of Chaos about how the Donald Trump administration’s policies are changing the American economic outlook sector by sector. And, short version is, now, a lot of you on Patreon have written in and said, hey, hey, hey, we don’t want to talk about the United States anymore. 

Think about the rest of world. I’m just like, you know, patience, grasshopper. We start at the top with the future of the most powerful country and the most powerful economy. And then we’ll move on to number two. And that’s what we’re gonna do this week. We’re going to start talking about China. Now, for those of you who need the refresher before we go into all of the details of the day, China is in a really bad spot. 

There are many, many, many problems, but the dominant one is demographics. Birth rates have been so low for so long for a mix of reasons fast industrialization, fast urbanization, and the one child policy that China’s birth rates have now been below that of the United States since 1991. Their population probably slipped below India, sometimes between 10 and 15 years ago. 

China’s own statisticians think now that they’ve over counted by at least 100 million people, maybe as many as 300 million. And best guess is, at the moment there are more people over age 53 than under, and all kinds of things come from that. But for the purpose of the firehose series, I think the single biggest one is that the Chinese are longer economically competitive in any manufacturing subsector. 

Once you factor out the fact that they’ve actually built the industrial plant, which is $37 trillion, that’s not nothing. But their labor force has gotten older and smaller without getting enough better. And so now we have labor costs per unit of production in China that are two and three times what they are in Mexico. And the Mexican labor is more highly skilled. 

So anything that leaves China doesn’t come back and the tariffs are absolutely going to accelerate that process. And this carries on into everything else. And there are many other problems. Consider finance for example, the Chinese have increased the amount of credit in their system by a factor of 40,000, since 2000, which is like far more than Enron ever did. 

And that leads to a collapse sooner or later, probably sooner, now that we’ve got the trade tensions and that shapes everything else. So, for example, if you just continue to expand your money supply, like China has, to the point that it’s triple in absolute terms what the U.S. money supply is, and they’re not even a traded currency. 

You start turning capital into a political asset rather than an economic one. And when you spend an economic assets like it’s a political force, you don’t do it on anything that is really worthwhile. So the Chinese use it to ensure mass deployment so that their people are quiescent. That only work so long is that there’s something for them to do. 

It also creates the housing sector, which is a legion of ghost cities, and it makes every economic sector they have remarkably in efficient, with the worst one being agriculture on a capital rated basis. The Chinese agricultural sector is the least efficient agricultural sector in human history. And it’s completely dependent on foreign inputs. You put all this together, and there was no way that the People’s Republic of China was going to survive as a unified government. 

And there’s no way that China, as a state would survive as a unified country just like 8 to 10 years from now. And that is before Donald Trump arrived. Now they have a lot less time. We’ll go through some of the specifics starting tomorrow.

The Question of Leadership…And Management

Donald Trump and Xi Jinping at the G20 Summit

Everyone gets mad at me for critiquing the leader that they like, but listen…I’m out here roasting everybody. Whether it’s Obama, Trump, Xi Jinping, or Grandma, nobody is safe. Okay fine, we’ll leave Gram Gram out of it for today.

Each of these three leaders has damaged long-term functionality of their respective governments. Obama was incredibly intelligent, but lacked the managerial skills to achieve bipartisan cooperation. Xi Jinping is paranoid and obsessed with preserving his power, which led him to purging the Chinese system and creating an overly centralized system that is disconnected from reality. Trump has adopted the worst qualities of both of these other leaders and brought them to his second term in office, results are obvious in daily news…

At least the US only has to deal with Trump for four years. The Chinese have no end in sight for their leadership crisis and are rapidly approaching demographic collapse. Hopefully the US can learn something from the chaos that will ensure in China, and avoid a similar fate.

Transcript

Hey all. Peter Zeihan here. Coming to you from Colorado at the Denver, Colorado airport. Today we’re talking about leadership. There are a few things going on. But I want to talk about three of my least favorite, leaders that are on the public stage right now. A lot of people. And all of a sudden. First, to establish my bona fides, I consider myself to be a political independent, which means that I think that I can look at politics in objective manner.

It’s even handed. What that really means is that everyone assumes that I’m partizan for the other side. You know, it’s just my personal cross to bear. But let’s start with somebody who is no longer in power, and that’s Barack Obama. Barack Obama is one of my least favorite leaders of the modern age, largely because of his lack of managerial skills.

Now, it’s not that he’s not intelligent. I would argue that he is the smartest president we’ve had since Jefferson. And he gave a lot of kind of exit interviews in his last year as president, where he demonstrated that he really did grasp how everything works, like why the Israeli-Palestinian conflict really had no meaningful conclusion that could ever be resolved.

Why green tech in its current form actually increases carbon output rather than decreases it? Whether it was economics, politics or strategy, he really did understand how everything fit together. But he really hated people. He hated being in the same room as people. He hated having conversations with people. It was a constitutional law professor. He wanted to lecture from the front.

He wanted that to be the end of it. So we actually thought when he was elected, that just because he was there, that we’d have bipartisan cooperation on everything and everything would be easy. And since he didn’t have meetings with anyone, that just didn’t work out. So of the presidents who served full terms going back to Foundation, no American president met with his cabinet or went to Congress fewer times than Barack Obama.

And so for eight years, we basically didn’t have a president. But that didn’t stop him from thinking that he was the smartest person in the room. So in his first meeting with the Joint Chiefs, he basically told everyone that he could do all of their jobs better than they could. You know, let’s let’s assume that that’s true for a moment.

So, you know, my understanding is the presidency is not a part time gig. So even if you were the best person for every job, you can’t do them all at the same time and do your own. And so he never delegated or sealed himself in the white House, basically built an information wall around him and just sat there for eight years, and he’ll go down in history as one of the worst managers in the worst presidents we’ve ever had.

Next up is chairman Xi of China, who, like all world leaders, is a bit narcissistic, but his issue is power preservation. Whereas Barack Obama always insisted that he was the smartest person in the room and was so confident in his arrogance that he basically just could be in a room alone. He is always concerned about what the next threat happens to be from internal services, because if you look back on the long stretch of Chinese history, lots of coups, lots of assassinations, and he knows that in a ossified political system like the Chinese Communist Party, it’s only a matter of time before somebody else decides to kick him off.

So his policy was to preemptively stop that. So he purged. He started with the local regional governments. He worked with the federal bureaucracy. More recently, he’s taken on academia and the business community in the military. And really, the last time he had a meaningful advisor who would tell him the truth has been 6 or 7 years ago now.

And so he’s been making policy in a box all that time. And federal policy out of China has become more and more erratic and less and less connected to reality. You know, part of this is in the geography of China, it’s a big place with a lot of variety. And the saying is that the emperor is far away.

And so you get China spinning between these two extremes of over centralization, which is definitely what we have now, or when the emperor or the chairman loses control, all of the regions take out power and basically become five terms of not nations to themselves. There’s really no good middle ground. At least there hasn’t been since, Chairman Deng back in the late 70s. Throughout the 80s. into the 90s. Well, sorry. Ding. Lived a long time. Anyway, what this means is that leadership in China is completely broken, completely isolated from the wider world. And the federal bureaucracy in China has seen so many of their messengers shot, in some cases, literally, that they’ve basically not just started to self-censor, but to self guide.

So if you look at the statistics the Chinese system collects, it’s not as robust as you would expect for a country of China’s level of size or sophistication, because if they present a data point to the Chinese premier that he doesn’t like, the Chinese simply stop collecting that statistic. So there’s no longer any information on things like local political biographies, because that would allow people to start climbing the ladder and getting into the system.

Same for college dissertations. Same for death rates. Same for the bond market. It might generate bad information. It’s not that they collect it and sit on it. It’s it. They don’t even collect it anymore. So they can never have that awkward moment with the boss. And then finally you’ve got Donald Trump. Now, normally when a leader loses an election and spend some time out of power, they try to hire some new people who fill in the gaps of their knowledge base, have skill sets that they don’t have, especially built around things that they want to achieve.

They build up a cadre of legislation so that when they get back into power, they can hit the ground running, modify the laws and Congress, and make sure that the vision this time outlasts the president for at least his current term.

That’s not what Donald Trump did. Instead, Donald Trump purged his inner circle of anyone who knew anything about anyone, including his outer circle, including the leadership of a Republican Party. So it’s just a yes man crowd, and a very thin one at that. You see, when he became president the first time around, he really didn’t expect to win.

And so he tapped the Republican Party apparatus quite strongly, as well as the military for his circle. And when they would inform him of things that he didn’t like to hear, he would fire them. That’s why he went through more cabinet secretaries than any American president in history. By a significant margin this time around, he’s made sure that that can’t happen.

He hasn’t brought in anyone who knows anything. So we have a vengeful, incompetent running the FBI. We have a TV host running the Defense Department and so on. What this means is that Trump has achieved in just a few months, what is taking Chairman XI of China almost 13 years to achieve?

And so what he’s done is basically seal himself in the white House. Obama’s style built a hermetic seal around, and more information can’t penetrate Obama’s style. But then he’s also gutted all of the sources of information that leadership would normally rely upon Xi style. In many ways, we’ve gotten the worst of all worlds. About the only thing I can offer as hope here is that really, most of the purging is at the top of the federal bureaucracy and all of the people down below, you know, the 3 million people in the military, in the bureaucracy that do the day to day.

There’s still there. There’s still a cadre that over time can regenerate the leadership. But that’s going to be a 5 to 15 year process. So take this for what it is. We’ve got three world leaders. Two of them are active that are actively destroying the ability of their states to function, not just during their administrations, but long term.

Now, in the case of the United States, there’s a use by day here. Trump will be gone one way or another within four years. Who knows what’s going to happen next. But in China, who even before the trade war, their demographic situation was so atrocious, they probably only had about eight years left. And now they have to do it without a functional government.

So Xi will be the last Chinese leader, and he will ride this system into the ground, and he will destroy the People’s Republic of China. And hopefully here in the United States on the other side of the Pacific. We’ll look at how that goes down and learn a few things about what to do and what not to do with your government.

The Fire Hose of Chaos: The Green Transition Is Over

Photo of a plant growing in a lightbulb

The green transition in the US has made great progress in recent years, but the wheels are falling off. This is largely due to economic pressures, lack of financing, and the new tariffs instituted by Trump.

Wind and solar projects require heavy upfront investment, which isn’t a great combo with capital costs skyrocketing and available capital draining from the system (blame the retiring Boomers). The government support for the green transition has also dried up; the Biden admin had the Inflation Reduction Act and other Greentech subsidies, but the Trump admin has pulled support and funding for these programs and projects. And you can’t forget the new tariffs hitting key components for the green transition, which have made solar prohibitively expensive and wind an uncertain gamble at best.

So, it looks like the green transition in the US will effectively be on pause until the US can build out its own manufacturing base. And that’s at least a decade-long process…

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Transcript

Hey, all. Peter Zeihan here. Coming to you from my parents backyard in Iowa. I’m visiting because I’m a good boy. Anyway, today we’re going to talk about the end of the Green Revolution in its current form, at least in the United States. There are three things that have come together to basically completely destroy the economics of the green transition. 

And then a couple of things on the side that are making it more difficult anyway. The first has to do with the baby boomers. Two thirds of them have retired, which means that all of the money that they were saving for retirement has been liquidated. And it’s gone into less exciting financial instruments such as T-bills and cash. 

And that means there’s less capital available for everything. So we’ve roughly seen the cost of capital in the United States increased by a factor of four in the last five years, has nothing to do or very little to do with government policy. It’s just that there’s less money available in the system overall. So mortgage rates go up, car loan rates go up, anything it needs to be financed goes up. 

And that’s a real problem for green tech. When you’re looking at, say, a conventional thermal power plant, coal, natural gas, that sort of thing, you only have to pay for about one fifth of the cost of the life of the plant at the front end. That’s the upfront construction. And then about two thirds of the expense over the full life of that power plant is the fuel, the coal or natural gas. 

And you buy that as you go. That’s not how it works with wind and solar. With wind and solar, about two thirds of the cost has to be paid upfront. And that means it has to be financed. Well, you increase the cost of financing by a factor of four, and all of a sudden you’re talking about a financial commitment. 

That’s just huge compared to what it would have been just five years ago. And that is now happening across the entire space. So that alone would have probably ended 70% of the power plants that are in solar and wind. Just just off the top. The second problem, of course, is that you have to finance everything upfront in the first place. 

Anyone who wanted to do the green transition really needed a helping hand from government, typically at the federal level. And the Biden administration, through things like the IRA Inflation Reduction Act, was very big in providing that financing. Well, that’s basically gone to zero under the Trump administration. So your financing costs have gone up by a factor of four, and you don’t have any outside help. 

But the real killer, especially for solar, has now been the tariffs. Almost all of the photo voltaic cells that are used in solar systems are produced in China, oftentimes with slave labor. And while the green transition folks were willing to overlook the fact that, most of the stuff was ha, I still have a sticker on there. 

Well, most of the folks in the green transition were willing to overlook the slave labor thing, in order to get the panels that they needed. You can’t really overlook 145% tariff. So if the PV cells cost you two and a half times as much and your financing cost has quadrupled, that’s just not going to fly. 

Now, it’s not quite as bad for wind because there are some non-Chinese providers of wind turbines. Most notably in northern Europe. But those were where we have a tariff of at the moment, 10%. It was 20% a week ago, that just introduces a lot of uncertainty into the system. So both of those things are gone. 

Wind a little on the edges. Maybe. Solar’s absolutely out of the question for most people now. The only other remaining piece is batteries. When last year, the Biden administration slapped a lot of tariffs early in the year on Chinese electric vehicle bills to keep them out of the U.S. market. What happened is the Chinese repackaged all of the EV batteries into, container units to be sold as grid storage. 

And so in calendar year 2024, adding battery storage, which is actually the cheapest form of power that you could add to your system. So the Texans in particular, you know, just boned up on that hugely. Because if you can have a battery grid system, it’s actually better economics and say having a natural gas peaker plant because they normally speakers or is would only run a few days of the year. 

The batteries can take that load, but since you now have them. And since Texas is the number one green energy state, they would use their solar system to generate power during the day, store the extra in the batteries, and then use that during peak demand and evening hours when the sun’s going down. 

It worked really well. She was like 48% off of power costs, but now we have 145% tariff on all of those batteries as well. So I don’t want to say that that’s going to stop cold, but the pace of the application is going to slow considerably because the Chinese dominate that space. And we haven’t built the industrial plant here yet. 

That isn’t necessarily to fill the gap for ourselves. So for the moment, minimum two years, probably until we have a better battery chemistry, probably until we have better PVS, certainly until we have more diversified manufacturing base, which is a ten year process. We’re looking at the green transition taking a bit. 

The Fire Hose of Chaos: Government Debt

Photo of house made our of 0 bills

With everything that’s going on in the US, it makes sense that foreign investors decided to dump US T-Bills. But what does this mean for the government debt market and the future of the USD?

The selloff of $100 billion in T-Bills caused interest rates to spike and US Treasury yields to jump; however, the US remains the global financial baseline. Other countries simply can’t offer the volume, stability, or scale that the US Market can.

With no real alternatives, the US will remain in the number one spot. If things did heat up, the Fed can always monetize the debt (which is something they’ve never had to do at large scale). And the US has structural advantages and policy tools that will keep the US stable in the long run.

Here at Zeihan on Geopolitics, our chosen charity partner is MedShare. They provide emergency medical services to communities in need, with a very heavy emphasis on locations facing acute crises. Medshare operates right in the thick of it, so we can be sure that every cent of our donation is not simply going directly to where help is needed most, but our donations serve as a force multiplier for a system already in existence.

For those who would like to donate directly to MedShare or to learn more about their efforts, you can click this link.

Transcript

Hey, all, Peter Zeihan here with a home office video. We’re gonna take a question from the Patreon crowd, and that is, do I worry about what’s going on with the government debt market? Specifically, some of Trump’s economic policies have been so erratic that they have been causing foreign investors, most notably the Chinese, to dump a lot of us T-bills on the market. 

We’ve had reports that as much as $100 billion has been dumped in a short period of time, and in doing so, the cost of financing that debt has gone up, with the US T-bills briefly hitting about 4.6% before falling back. Basically going up a half a percentage point in a day doesn’t sound like much, but typically if you go up more than like 5/100 of a percent in a day, it’s kind of a big deal from a financing point of view, because in the US, government has issued more debt to pay for the financing. 

And since there’s $36 trillion in outstanding debt, you move that needle just a little bit and all of a sudden the US government can get into a lot of financial trouble. And some version of that is what destroyed the Premier ship of Elizabeth Truss in the United Kingdom a couple of years ago. She instituted a policy of tax cuts that were going to be funded by debt, thinking that the growth would then make up for the difference. 

And the market absolutely destroyed the pound briefly. And she was out in only a few days. I don’t really worry about that from the American point of view. A few reasons for that. First and most importantly, the US T-bill market is the global standard. Whether or not it is the 80 list standard is not the point. 

The point is it’s the baseline that everything else trades around. So you can have governments with tighter fiscal ships like say, the Netherlands or Australia or Germany, whose debt is generally considered higher quality than the US. And it doesn’t matter because with $36 trillion, we are the baseline for pretty much all financial instruments, and that provides a lot of cushion against big shocks. 

The bigger problem is whether or not the United States is risking losing its position as the global currency, the global store of value in the currency of first and last resort. After April 2nd, when Trump put in the tariffs, it basically would have generated a global meltdown if they would have stuck around. The concern is that there is a flight to safety, and usually in a flight to safety, people go to gold because they interpret as it being inflation resistant, and they go to U.S. T-bills because they’re the global standard in the US economy. 

If something happens to it, the rest of the world has already melted down. Well, since the cause of the problem was the US government, the T-bills didn’t seem to be a particularly viable option and money went elsewhere. But if you look at the other options, they kind of suck. They went to the European Euro, and the euro has risen since the US dollar in the last couple of weeks. 

But at the end of the day, the countries in Europe are demographically dead, and they can’t provide this type of baseline activity that isn’t necessary to underwrite a new store of value or a new source of exchange. And the euro is bigger than all the other options put together. The British pound still hasn’t recovered from the Truss episode, and without the Empire behind them, they’re just a mid-sized country. 

They could never provide the volume. Canada, Australia. They run a tight ship. But you’re talking about countries with under 40 million people. In the case of Canada, under 30 million people. In the case of Australia, they just can’t compare to 330 million that are in the United States. Not to mention, the United States is a larger economy per capita than any of the others. 

And that just leaves Japan, which until recently had one of the most manipulated currencies in the world. People like to talk about the yuan, but the one is not internationally traded. It’s not even an option. There’s just nowhere else to go. But even in the worst case scenario where everyone, everyone decides they just have to go somewhere else. 

Which, by the way, does indicate a complete financial meltdown of all countries. Even in that scenario, the United States has an ace up its sleeve that has been used as a matter of course, by pretty much every other central bank for the last 30 years. You see, as countries have been demographically declining, their debt has become less and less attractive. 

And so the central banks have had to step in and monetize that debt bit by bit by bit, basically printing currency to buy up the government debt. It’s not that the US doesn’t do this, but the US has never done this on the scales. Everyone else has done it. And since the Covid crisis ended, the federal Reserve has basically been cleaning up its balance sheet month by month by month. 

And so there’s a lot of wiggle room for the fed to do just that. Now, that would still have consequences. But we’re talking here about an end of the world scenario, which is kind of my specialty. And in that scenario, you basically would have the Federal Reserve monetize large portions of the debt and become the buyer of government debt, a first and last resort. 

In that scenario, the existence of the US t-bill as the baseline for everyone else would be a little bit different, but it wouldn’t stop. So having that in your back pocket gives you a lot of options that nobody else has. Don’t feel great about it. We’ll be okay on this measure.

The Fire Hose of Chaos: What Is Hegseth Doing?

Official government photo of Pete Hegseth

Pete Hegseth, the current Secretary of Defense, has been doing his best to completely dismantle the United States’ ability to fight a war now or in the future. Let’s look at why this is happening…

Here at Zeihan on Geopolitics, our chosen charity partner is MedShare. They provide emergency medical services to communities in need, with a very heavy emphasis on locations facing acute crises. Medshare operates right in the thick of it, so we can be sure that every cent of our donation is not simply going directly to where help is needed most, but our donations serve as a force multiplier for a system already in existence.

For those who would like to donate directly to MedShare or to learn more about their efforts, you can click this link.

Transcript

Peter Zeihan here. It’s Easter Monday. You’ll see this on Easter Tuesday. And today we have to talk about the Department of Defense and in particular, the Secretary of Defense. A guy by the name of Pete Hegseth. Pete Hegseth is the least qualified, most incompetent secretary of defense the United States has had. And over the couple of months that he has been in the office, he has done more to destroy the United States’ capacity to fight a current war, much less a future war, than really anyone in American history. 

And it’s worth exploring why. The big news that came out over Easter weekend that has prompted me to talk about this topic is that if you remember back a few weeks ago, we had the SignalGate issue where the Secretary of Defense, Hegseth, set up a chat room with a bunch of other top national security folks, as well as the Treasury Secretary. 

And somehow a reporter got invited onto it, and on an unsecured platform that the Russians had cracked the security on, started discussing active war plans and operational intelligence—something that under normal circumstances would have gotten everyone involved fired. But this is the Trump administration, and decisions are made differently these days. Anyway, turns out that around the same time that he did that, Hegseth had another single chat—again unsecured—but this time with personal friends, his personal lawyer, his wife, no one who had a security clearance. 

And to be clear, this is a felony that would get anyone in the armed forces put away forever and dishonorably discharged in a matter of seconds. The Trump administration has already said they see nothing wrong with this, and Hegseth will continue in his position. I think it’s worth understanding why the United States military is the most powerful military force in human history, and how Hegseth is looking to rip that up, root and branch. 

The first issue is education. When you have a force that spans the globe, you will need dozens of different skill sets, especially in your officer corps. So the United States maintains the most advanced staffed college system in human history to train up their mid-career officers for any possible outcome, as well as to teach them things like history, economics, trade, technology, electricity, energy, and all the rest. 

One of the things that Hegseth has said is that anything that does not directly encourage activities for an active war fighter should be cut. That includes all of the staff colleges, which is where we get all of our officers. Basically, it’s a return—or an attempt to return—the training system to something that was much more reminiscent of what we had in the Civil War, where you just threw bodies at everything. 

Gone would be the efforts of leveraging technology or anything else. The second issue is these educational institutions that we have to keep in mind: globe-spanning military force. So we do two things. Number one, we fly the troops to the educators. We try to fly the educators to the troops based on the circumstances. In addition, there’s the little issue of allies. Because the United States has the best training system in the world, we kind of lend it out, if you will. We invite other war fighters from allied countries to come to our training institutions to basically get a doctorate in the American way of warfighting, as well as seal up alliances and potential alliances with countries that are not, yes, treaty allies. Well, that requires people moving about. 

And one of the things that Hegseth has done is a blanket travel ban on all the educators so that they can’t travel. So if you want a war fighter to get trained, he now absolutely has to come to where the university happens to be, whether that’s in Annapolis or in Monterey. And everyone else is just shit out of luck. 

So we’ve seen what is arguably, in my opinion, the single biggest advantage we have long-term whittled down to just a weak spot. Then there’s technology. You may have noticed, but since the age of computers, the type of hardware that we are using in the world has been evolving, especially in the last few years with the Ukraine war. 

So, for example, the military gets a lot of crap, I think, fairly or unfairly, for being kind of stodgy because the technologies that they have used really haven’t evolved or mutated a lot in the last hundred years. I mean, yeah, yeah, yeah, we got jets after World War Two or at the end of World War Two. We got tanks at the end of World War One. We developed missiles during the Cold War. But guns, artillery, missiles, jets, helicopters, ships—you know, the general playbook hasn’t evolved all that much. The same basic platforms haven’t evolved. We just upgrade specific technologies and put them together in different packages and throw them at different problems in different ways. 

But the pieces really haven’t changed all that much. Well, starting about five, ten years ago, that really started to shift because we got breakthroughs in things like information technology and energy transfer and digitization, and they’re all happening at the same time, and they’re combining into new weapons systems that we’re only now starting to game out and design. And the Ukraine war is famous, of course, for drones. 

And drones are absolutely the leading edge of this revolution. But we don’t know what this is going to look like in five years or ten years or 15 years or 30 years. And keep in mind that we have a lot of weapon platforms that we designed back in the ’50s that we’re still using. So you have to have an institution within the military that games out the future. 

This takes two forms. First, you get the best and the brightest from the Intel systems within the military. You put them together in a room and get them to imagine the sort of thing that the president is going to be demanding of the military forces in ten, twenty, forty, eighty years. Then you need a technical team that can design a weapons system that will not just be useful ten and twenty years from now but can be upgraded and still be used a generation or two from now. 

Well, Hegseth is firing all of those people. The Office of Net Assessment—whose job it is to do the first part of that, imagine the future—has already been disbanded, and we’re seeing massive cutbacks in excess of 70% for all the officers that do the technical work. So basically, the United States is taking a giant technological step backward in its warfighting under Hegseth. 

And then the third issue is recruitment. Remember, we don’t know what the weapons of the future are going to be. So why in the world would you put any restrictions on how someone might choose to serve their country? We need everyone of every background. And if you look back at the history of the U.S. military going all the way back to before the Civil War, it’s not just that the military has always been a social ladder for underprivileged groups to attain status within a society. 

It’s a way they can attain leadership. They can get the skills that they need to remake their own futures. And from the American point of view, from the military point of view, from the tactical point of view, from the warfighter point of view—we need everyone we can get. Newsflash, folks: straight white dudes are less than one third of the population. 

And if you put restrictions on how the other two thirds of the population can choose to serve the country, you will never meet your recruitment goals. So in the last two months, we’ve seen a series of things go down. Most notably, Hegseth recently changed the physical requirements for what you have to match in order to serve in the military. 

Gold review phraseology—a policy that almost seems like it was custom-designed to kick all women out of the U.S. military. And then, of course, recruitment for any place that is not totally stocked with white dudes has basically been cut to zero. Even Black engineering universities are no longer being visited. And I know, I know, some people are going to say, well, if you’ve got a standard and everyone can’t meet it, it doesn’t work. 

No, no, no, no, no. The Israelis broke the seal on women in the military over 50 years ago. And today, every first-world military has a substantial proportion of women in the field. So if you can’t adjust for that, you’re going back to the 1840s. Moreover, there are some jobs—like, say, fighter pilots—where women are better because they can handle the G-forces better. 

So is Hegseth going to change the policy so only chicks are fighting in the jets? I don’t think so. What we’re seeing is it’s all adding up to the greatest degradation of American warfighting potential that we have ever seen. And this is only two months in. I also don’t think this is the end of it. Yes, Hegseth has now committed multiple felonies. 

Yes, Hegseth is an unmitigated disaster in his leadership. And yes, his entire inner office has now been fired. Oh, this is rich—he fired everybody in his office saying that they were all leaking information. I have no idea if that is true, but Hegseth has a history—especially in the SignalGate stuff—of saying something that is just a bald-faced lie, knowing that the information is out there to prove him wrong. 

And it’s usually released in the next couple of days. So by the time we see this video, we will probably have multiple lawsuits against Hegseth personally, for people firing, quitting, etc. So by the time you see this video, it’s entirely possible that the office that was fired—they will have all issued wrongful termination lawsuits and provided the information that will prove this guy is just an absolute moron. 

Okay. Do I think he’s going to go? No. Remember, the Trump administration did not build its cabinet because it thought these people were capable or change agents. He chose them because they were incompetent. The first time around, when Donald Trump became president, he really didn’t expect it. He thought he was going to lose to Hillary Clinton. And so he didn’t have a cadre of people around him because he had never been in government. 

Well, he reached into the Republican Party, pulled their policy experts, and—especially on security affairs—relied very heavily on generals and admirals to fill out the billets. Well, what he discovered in that environment is when you have generals and admirals who have been through the staff training program and they know how the world works intimately, they have opinions about how things should be done, and they can point out consequences if you do things the wrong way. 

Well, whenever that happened, Trump fired them. And so he went through more cabinet members than any American president in history. Just a huge number of generals rotated through the White House in positions like, say, Secretary of Defense or CIA Director. Fast forward to this most recent race. 

Trump had decided while he was out of power that rather than build a team of competent people who could push an agenda through, he wanted to make sure that there was never anyone in the room who would tell him no. So he reached out and hired people like Pete Hegseth, who I would argue three months before he became Secretary of Defense, had no idea that that was in his future. 

Well, because Trump values incompetence near him, there is no reason to expect Hegseth to be dismissed. I mean, of course he should be dismissed. But of course, in a normal administration, he would have never been nominated, much less confirmed. And that brings us to the next problem: Hegseth and people who are at his level of general incompetence—that includes the Director of National Intelligence, who is Tulsi Gabbard, or the Health and Human Services Secretary, who is Robert Kennedy Jr. 

All of these people should not be in their spots, but they’re going to stay because Trump values their lack of expertise. He values their yes-man mentality. He values the fact that they’re not keeping him informed because it allows him to live in his hermetically sealed, Obama-esque bubble. The only way that these people can go away is if they are impeached. 

And since the Trump team has basically gutted the Senate of anyone who is willing to stand out, that’s a really tall order. As Senator Murkowski of Alaska pointed out, retaliation against Trump is real. And so she’s considering leaving the party and being an independent in her home state of Alaska. That would still leave us with 52 Republican senators who are either unwilling or unable to stand against the president on issues of national security. 

And if you’re going to impeach someone, you have to get two thirds of both houses of Congress. So now you’re talking about roughly 20 Republican senators having to flip. In this political environment, I just don’t see that as feasible. So we are looking into the long, painful, drawn-out crash of the United States’ ability to manage its national security concerns under a leadership that is thin, that is broken, that is incompetent—and unfortunately, that we are stuck with for the foreseeable future.

The Fire Hose of Chaos: Corruption

Photo of a bronze trump doll on stacks of 0 bills

The Trump administration has introduced a level of chaos that can only result in one thing: corruption. I’m not talking about starting a cryptocurrency or manipulating the stock market, this is deeper.

Trump’s arbitrary tariff policies are destabilizing the US economy and eroding the rule of law. The ever-changing nature of these policies makes it impossible for importers to plan for or comply with. And in a broken system, corruption is bound to seep in. And since the US relies on self-reporting tariff obligations and has very few guide rails in place, businesses will likely turn to bribery to keep their goods flowing smoothly.

This is reminiscent of 1990s Russia, or even what happened in Argentina, which aren’t the best examples to be compared to…

Here at Zeihan on Geopolitics, our chosen charity partner is MedShare. They provide emergency medical services to communities in need, with a very heavy emphasis on locations facing acute crises. Medshare operates right in the thick of it, so we can be sure that every cent of our donation is not simply going directly to where help is needed most, but our donations serve as a force multiplier for a system already in existence.

For those who would like to donate directly to MedShare or to learn more about their efforts, you can click this link.

Transcript

Hey all, Peter Zeihan coming to you from Colorado. Today we’re going to do the most recent in our Firehose of Chaos series, looking at the economic impacts on the US from corruption that is being imposed upon the system by the Trump administration. And we’re not talking about here corruption at the top, like when Donald Trump forces foreign dignitaries to stay at his hotels, or when he starts a Bitcoin program to basically scam people, or when he does pump and dump systems with the entire stock market. 

That’s a separate topic. And we’re not talking about a more traditional corruption that happens in a federal bureaucratic environment when bureaucrats basically pad things like invoices and take a cut themselves, not the Chinese style. We’re talking here about corruption that is being imposed by the Trump administration on the broader economy, where it can have a much bigger, deeper impact and really start eating away at the cultural advantages that we have of the United States, including rule of law and all has to do with the rapid, rapid, rapid changes in economic policy, most notably tariff policy. 

I’m recording this on tax day, April 15th, and we have now had 94 tariff policies in 44 days, all coming from Trump himself. This is not counting the policy suggestions that are coming from cabinet secretaries or the back and forth that’s happening within the administration is they’re trying to come to grips with whatever. The most recent thing to come out of Trump’s mouth is. 

This is just hard. Trump tariffs. And in that sort of environment, it is impossible for companies who are doing importing to really know what to do because there’s a process for collecting terrorist. I mean, think about the volume here. It’s roughly $3.8 trillion in goods imports every year. That’s over 62 million container units. And we have no none, zero staff at US ports to collate those things, to understand what the value is of the product. 

And so therefore what the terror should be, the way tariffs are collected in this country is the importer self-reports what is coming as it crosses the border and into the port of entry, and then pays the taxes electronically. And in that sort of environment, clarity is absolutely critical. And having 94 tariff policies in 44 days and knowing that much, much, much more is coming down the pipe means that no one’s really sure what to do. 

Because oftentimes we get multiple tariff policies in a single day. We’ve had two days already where we got six tariff policies within an eight hour period. And so even if you are attempting to follow the rules to the letter, you can’t because you never know what is going to come out of Trump’s mouth. These tariffs happen instantly, or maybe with a 48 hour lead in. 

And then it’s just a question of enforcement and there is no enforcement. So take for example auto tariffs on May 2nd. We’re supposed to get a new tariff that’s 25% on all auto parts. If you have a container of auto parts coming in on a truck from, say, Ontario, when that hits the border, you need to know each an individual part that is in there and then report it. 

But what if it’s something that is dual use, like say, wiring? Is it an auto part? Is an electronic part, is it a welding part? Is it something else. So the administrative cost of that goes through the roof and probably is going to be higher than the part is in the first place. The other problem, let me give you another example is what’s going to happen with electronics, over a two week period starting on April 2nd. We had tariffs going up on China. We start with 20%. We went to, I think 54%. Then we went to 80 something percent, down 104%, then 125% and finally 145%. 

So everything coming in from China had that kind of scale going up, and the importers didn’t know what to do. Now think about electronics, a specific subset over $100 billion of electronics coming from China every year. Well, what we did originally was 145% tariff. That’s why I bought my extra phones and my extra computer. 

And then about April 11th, Trump said, just kidding, they’re in abeyance. In fact, we’re not even going to charge our 10% base tariff on electronics products. So it used to be relatively simple, relatively, where every container in just had a flat 145% tariff. Now they had to do a carve out for electronics the next day. Coward, like the Commerce secretary said, this is temporary. 

Don’t get used to it. So they started putting it back on again the next day, Trump said, no, it really is off. And so they started peeling it off again. And then the next day Donald Trump said, actually, no one is going to get an exemption. We’re just going to have a different bucket for computing and electronics products. 

It’s going to be part of our semiconductor tariff. So what now? We’re going to have an additional tariff on every thing that has a computer chip in it. Well, that includes everything from backyard grills to white goods to your fridge. No one knows what the system is, so no one can choose to follow it dutifully because the rules keep changing, they’re not clear. 

And instead of being built up by the bureaucracy who puts this all into the public register where anyone can follow it, it is literally, often nothing more than a Trump tweet. So where does that leave us? Well, it’s a question of how do you administer these things? There’s two problems there, too. Number one, Donald Trump fired all those, fired all of the temporary workers in the federal system. 

Imports and exports don’t flow in the same, scale on for the same products every single day. So we have a lot of temporary workers who work in the ports to help out with the work, as it needs to be done specifically for border Patrol. Those people have either been fired or directed to other tasks, and so they’re no longer is a staff to do it. 

So, for example, on April 11th, when the software for this entire system failed, we just didn’t collect tariffs that day. Oh, there’s also the issue at the upper levels. There’s no one to interpret what Trump says. Remember that the top 1400 positions across the federal bureaucracy were basically cut when Trump cleared out everyone, including the people who are typically not fired between administrations because they have the all the organizational knowledge and technical skills, they’re all gone. 

So there isn’t a cadre of people at the top that are loyal to Trump that also have the ability to design these programs. And even if there was, you know, they’d have to do it hour by hour. Well, we have seen this before. This reminds me a lot of Argentina, where the Peronist government, through the 2000 to the 20 tens, kept changing the rules over and over and over and over and over again for personal, political or ideological reasons. 

And it became easier for everyone to just find ways to avoid them. See, the problem is, is when you make the rules impossible to follow, the only way that business people can function. Is to have a personal relationship with the people who are enforcing the rules. The way tariffs work, you self-report and then there are spot checks. We have set up the perfect system that will, for force American importers and businesses to bribe the people who do the spot checks, and that is something that will corrode out through the broader system. 

This is very Russian 1990s right now. We’re setting up the stage where we’re telling our business community that they have no choice but to violate the rules if they’re going to function, because the rules are almost designed to not be valuable. Is that even a word? Anyway, it would be nice if this all settled down in the near future, but Trump has promised us in the next few weeks we’re going to have tariffs on sector products. 

So agriculture, car parts, semiconductors, medications and so on. As with everything, there is no one in the upper echelons of his administration who knows much of anything about these economic sectors. So it’s all going to be arbitrary, it’ll all be based on the ideas that Donald Trump is having at the time, based on whatever data point he happens to find egregious. And there will not be a rules creation system. 

It’ll simply be imposed by tweet. No one will know how to follow it, and it will set us up for an erosion of rule of law throughout our corporate world. Bye.

Why There’s No Fentanyl in Easter Eggs This Year

Photo of easter eggs in a basket

US efforts against fentanyl have been ramping up. Specifically, the Trump administration has turned its focus to one specific Mexican cartel – La Familia Michoacana.

The US has increased financial sanctions on the fentanyl trade, specifically targeting the cartel’s foothold in Lázaro Cárdenas – Mexico’s largest Pacific port. This position allows La Familia Michoacan to import the precursor materials direct from China and India. In case that wasn’t enough, a bounty has been placed on the cartel’s leaders, the Olascoaga brothers.

Fentanyl will remain a problem for the US, but at least there won’t be any in your easter eggs this year…hopefully.

Here at Zeihan on Geopolitics, our chosen charity partner is MedShare. They provide emergency medical services to communities in need, with a very heavy emphasis on locations facing acute crises. Medshare operates right in the thick of it, so we can be sure that every cent of our donation is not simply going directly to where help is needed most, but our donations serve as a force multiplier for a system already in existence.

For those who would like to donate directly to MedShare or to learn more about their efforts, you can click this link.

Transcript

Hello, Peter Zeihan here. Coming to you from Colorado. Happy Easter. Let’s talk about drugs. Specifically fentanyl. Last week, the Trump administration. These are courtesy of my niece, by the way, and my sister. And they have no taste. Anyway, last week, the Trump administration upped enforcement of, basically financial sanctions against folks involved with the drug trade in Mexico, specifically a group by the name of La Familia Michoacan, which is a cartel in the southern part of the country. 

Music. Milliken state. Why does this matter? Well, Sentinel is a really difficult drug to move against because it’s a synthetic. It only takes a few seconds per dose to produce, basically do 100,000 doses in a garage and in the course of a week, as opposed to cocaine, which has a long agricultural supply chain stretching it back to South America. 

And so most of the things that the United States has done, before and during this current Trump administration has almost been pointless, because if you’re dealing with dozens, hundreds, thousands of mom and pop operators that are building this stuff, a traditional military or law enforcement approach just doesn’t work. The volumes are too small or too easy to smuggle. 

And since it’s synthetic, you basically can put it anywhere. So even if Mexico, working with the United States or on its own, was able to get rid of fentanyl production, it would just move to Oklahoma or Nevada or somewhere else. There has been a recent breakthrough with the de minimis shipping exception being closed, and that will greatly reduce the volumes of the precursor materials that make it in from India and China. 

And that will complicate the drug production, but it doesn’t solve the problem. Ultimately, it’s small scale and it’s hard to fight, of course, within every general trend there is an exception and la familia Michoacan is the exception. They are a cartel that instead of built around the smuggling of cocaine, is built a blurring the mass production of fentanyl. They are the only one of the major, narcotics trafficking groups in Mexico that has followed that business model. 

And because they control the part of Lazaro Cardenas, which is the largest Pacific port in Mexico, they have easy access to the raw materials that they need to basically produce fentanyl at an industrial pace. And they are largely immune to anything that happens with the de minimis exception or law enforcement in the United States. In many ways, they’re powerful enough to be a state within a state, and they control all of the corruption that goes along in the port as well. 

So rooting them out is going to be very, very difficult. In addition, some of the military options that the Trump administration really are inappropriate for this, not just because this is a major commercial port that would have a lot of complications and problems, but it’s on the wrong side of the country. It is on the southern coast of Mexico. 

It is nowhere near the U.S. border, so it’s just not in the sort of place that, the Trump administration or the United States in general can act. That said, the Trump administration has definitely named and shamed the brothers. Alaska Bagwell, who are in charge of the cartel, are now bumped up on the most wanted list. And I believe the new bounty is $8 million, in addition to a whole series of financial sanctions and indictments from US federal prosecutors. There is no good solution here. If there was, fentanyl wouldn’t be a problem. 

But because there’s an industrial scale production in this part of Mexico, U.S. authorities working in league with the Mexican government might actually be able to do something. It’s one thing to go door to door through every Mexican and American city looking for a drug lab. It’s quite another when, you know, the largest fentanyl labs in the world are in one specific city. 

That happens to be a port doesn’t make it easy, but it does mean that the sharp end of American power is a little bit more appropriate for this specific fight than for the rest of the drug war.