Hello, listeners.
Jacob Shapiro:Welcome to another episode of the Jacob Shapiro podcast.
Jacob Shapiro:Joining me is somebody who I've wanted to have on the podcast for quite some time.
Jacob Shapiro:His name is Kaiser Quo.
Jacob Shapiro:He's the host of the Seneca Podcast, which is a weekly discussion
Jacob Shapiro:of current affairs in China.
Jacob Shapiro:He's also a guitarist in a rock band and has done lots of other things
Jacob Shapiro:besides, he has a rich biography that I encourage you to check out.
Jacob Shapiro:he wrote an absolutely excellent piece entitled The Great Reckoning, what
Jacob Shapiro:The West Should Learn From China.
Jacob Shapiro:we're including a link to that piece.
Jacob Shapiro:in the show notes, I even say when I'm at, when I'm beginning my conversation with
Jacob Shapiro:Kaiser, that I'm gonna assume, at least that the listeners have taken a glance
Jacob Shapiro:at it because it's that good an essay.
Jacob Shapiro:And I wanted to jump off, from the essay and ask Kaiser questions
Jacob Shapiro:rather than ask him to, recap it, I'd highly recommend, you read it.
Jacob Shapiro:we had Jeffrey Neuman on the podcast a couple of weeks ago.
Jacob Shapiro:He wrote an incredible piece about artificial intelligence, which I said was
Jacob Shapiro:one of the best things I've read all year.
Jacob Shapiro:This essay from Kaiser is right up there with it.
Jacob Shapiro:it'll be on my Mount Rushmore of res for 2025.
Jacob Shapiro:I really wanna thank Kaiser for taking the time, to come on the show.
Jacob Shapiro:It was a tremendous conversation.
Jacob Shapiro:Listeners, if you want to hear more about any of this, you can
Jacob Shapiro:email me at jacob@jacobshapiro.com.
Jacob Shapiro:Otherwise.
Jacob Shapiro:Take care of the people that you love.
Jacob Shapiro:Cheers, and see you at.
Jacob Shapiro:All right, Kaiser, it's, so great to finally have you on the podcast.
Jacob Shapiro:And I told this to you in, an email, but I'll tell the story also just for the
Jacob Shapiro:benefit of, the guy who's listening, who works at the coworking space that I work
Jacob Shapiro:in here in New Orleans, in this very office, I was at the, I was at the coffee
Jacob Shapiro:station with him last week, and he was like, I've been listening to your podcast.
Jacob Shapiro:Have you heard of Kaiser Quo?
Jacob Shapiro:Are you gonna have him on?
Jacob Shapiro:I was like, funny, you should mention that.
Jacob Shapiro:I would love to get him on.
Jacob Shapiro:And he wants, he literally wants to like, take you around New Orleans, and give
Jacob Shapiro:you like a Manhattan tour of New Orleans, because apparently you love Manhattans
Jacob Shapiro:because he went down that deep with you.
Jacob Shapiro:but anyways, you No, it was
Kaiser Kuo:Cex actually.
Kaiser Kuo:Oh, CAX.
Jacob Shapiro:Sorry.
Jacob Shapiro:My
Kaiser Kuo:bad, You live in New Orleans.
Kaiser Kuo:come on.
Kaiser Kuo:it's like the drink of your town.
Kaiser Kuo:It's that your official cocktail.
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah.
Kaiser Kuo:I'm partially good Cach.
Kaiser Kuo:I'm known to make, them my own, my on my own pretty well,
Jacob Shapiro:in, in my defense, I grew up an hour outside Atlanta, Georgia.
Jacob Shapiro:My wife is the one who is from this region and kidnapped me, okay.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm a lonely falcon in a sea of saints and I have stuck to my guns, but I,
Kaiser Kuo:we'll, tell 'em, I, I'd be really, I'd be more than happy to take
Kaiser Kuo:him off on the offer if it comes with a, a round trip ticket, that's even better.
Kaiser Kuo:But,
Jacob Shapiro:I might be able to work, I might be able to work on that for you.
Jacob Shapiro:But that's something we could talk about with the mics off.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause I'd love to collaborate on things.
Jacob Shapiro:Listen listeners, the, the thing that got me off my butt to finally reach out
Jacob Shapiro:and insist that you come on the podcast was this great essay that you wrote.
Jacob Shapiro:the title is The Great Reckoning, what The West Should Learn From China.
Jacob Shapiro:We will have a link, in the show notes.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm not gonna, I'm gonna assume that my listeners are, have enough gumption
Jacob Shapiro:to read the article themselves.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm gonna springboard questions off that, that come off of the article.
Jacob Shapiro:If you really want to get the full value of this, this episode, I would
Jacob Shapiro:suggest, you read it very strongly.
Jacob Shapiro:It's one of the best things I've read all year.
Jacob Shapiro:It's
Kaiser Kuo:rather dauntingly long, so I apologize in advance for that.
Kaiser Kuo:I don't know.
Jacob Shapiro:Is it, I did not find it dauntingly long, but then you knows
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah, these days people read what a tweet, right?
Kaiser Kuo:no, it's, 5,500 words I think.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, I think we can handle it.
Jacob Shapiro:The, listeners who come to this podcast can handle, more than a tweet length.
Jacob Shapiro:but the question that I wanted to start off with and we'll
Jacob Shapiro:jump around a little bit,
Jacob Shapiro:part of, the conceit of your essay is you're arguing that the West needs to
Jacob Shapiro:engage with a kind of reckoning with China to not just understand China's rise, but
Jacob Shapiro:what it reveals about our own blind spots.
Jacob Shapiro:And I wanted to flip the mirror both ways, 'cause I wanted to ask you
Jacob Shapiro:explicitly, what do you think the West should genuinely earn from China?
Jacob Shapiro:But then I also wanted to flip it around and ask you, and what do you
Jacob Shapiro:think China should learn from the West?
Jacob Shapiro:And I asked that question also from the, point of view of, I think China
Jacob Shapiro:is going through now maybe what the West and particularly the United States
Jacob Shapiro:went through in the early 19 hundreds.
Jacob Shapiro:So whereas the West might learn something about its future from
Jacob Shapiro:China, maybe China can learn something about its future from the West past.
Jacob Shapiro:I, don't know.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm, grappling in the dark there with it, but I wanted to turn that question
Jacob Shapiro:on its head for you and allow you to play with both ends of the question.
Kaiser Kuo:let's start with the other end, the adverse end.
Kaiser Kuo:And, I, would have to say, China has been learning, pretty fastidiously
Kaiser Kuo:from the west this whole time since, the reform and opening happened.
Kaiser Kuo:In fact, it, it even learned Marxism from a notional west, Marxism itself.
Kaiser Kuo:But, speaking less, less maybe facetiously here, since reform and opening began in
Kaiser Kuo:the late seventies, there has been a, very deliberate effort to, learn from
Kaiser Kuo:Western expertise in all manner of things.
Kaiser Kuo:And if you look, I don't know how much time you spent Jacob in China, so many of
Kaiser Kuo:the institutions, there are so many of the norms, so many of the way that things are
Kaiser Kuo:done are cribbed directly from the west.
Kaiser Kuo:So that pretty much any American who goes there now will find it very familiar.
Kaiser Kuo:There's a lot that's very familiar about it.
Kaiser Kuo:Everything from the way that sort of traffic is organized to the way that
Kaiser Kuo:the banking systems work, to, you know, just every, everything that you do.
Kaiser Kuo:Processes are, remarkably similar.
Kaiser Kuo:and so yeah, I don't, I think that there's been no shortage of that.
Kaiser Kuo:I, it's, weird.
Kaiser Kuo:I, didn't think of the essay in terms of what China can learn.
Kaiser Kuo:that was a title that was given to it by the editors.
Kaiser Kuo:I didn't object to it.
Kaiser Kuo:But that's really not the upshot of the essay.
Kaiser Kuo:It's not really all about, about, in fact, I'm, critical of this idea that
Kaiser Kuo:the United States ought to simply just cut and paste, copy, paste,
Kaiser Kuo:things that it sees, that, may or may not have led to China's successes.
Kaiser Kuo:I, that's not something I particularly advocate.
Kaiser Kuo:I, it's more about just Reflection and recognition.
Kaiser Kuo:it's a psychological thing.
Kaiser Kuo:It's not, Hey, here's a thing that China is doing well.
Kaiser Kuo:In fact, I'm, actually critical about that in some ways, and I point out what I think
Kaiser Kuo:are ironies about that, about some of the things that, that the US does seem now to
Kaiser Kuo:be desperately adopting from China that I don't think is necessarily a good fit.
Jacob Shapiro:I guess the way I meant it was, 'cause I think you're right and
Jacob Shapiro:I think your, essay is sharper than that, and I think it really actually forces
Jacob Shapiro:us to wrestle with what it means to be modern and what progress means and what
Jacob Shapiro:different types of political structures can lead to different political outcomes.
Jacob Shapiro:But the, question I was circling in on, I, did a little research comparing the
Jacob Shapiro:US in the 1870s to the 19 hundreds to what China is going through right now.
Jacob Shapiro:And just, a couple figures to throw at you.
Jacob Shapiro:from the founding of the United States until 1880, there were 118,000 roughly
Jacob Shapiro:inventions registered at patent offices in the United States between 1880 and 1920.
Jacob Shapiro:That increased by 20 x. in 1870, the United States is producing 77,000.
Jacob Shapiro:tons of steel by 1900, it's 11.2 million.
Jacob Shapiro:They're factories over that, 30 year period.
Jacob Shapiro:Four x from a hundred thousand to 500,000 per capita, GNP up 133%.
Jacob Shapiro:just absolutely mind boggling numbers in terms of growth
Jacob Shapiro:during that 30 year period.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, absolutely.
Jacob Shapiro:In US history and in some ways it sets the rest of us history on right
Jacob Shapiro:down to the rise of progressivism and the rise of a US political culture
Jacob Shapiro:for everything from bowling leagues to Rotary Club, like the number of
Jacob Shapiro:organizations that are founded in the United States that are still around today.
Jacob Shapiro:The Boy Scouts, American Farm Bureau.
Jacob Shapiro:It's all as a reaction to that incredible growth.
Jacob Shapiro:And it seems to me that China.
Jacob Shapiro:Has just done that and maybe is still in the process of doing that
Jacob Shapiro:and is doing that with a political system, which yes, takes some things
Jacob Shapiro:from the west, but is also like very different in how it's structured.
Jacob Shapiro:And just trying to think through like what that means for China going,
Jacob Shapiro:maybe there are no lessons from the US or the Western experience from
Jacob Shapiro:that position of growth going forward.
Jacob Shapiro:but I like that, was the question I was trying to circle in.
Kaiser Kuo:Sure.
Kaiser Kuo:No, I, get it.
Kaiser Kuo:And I think, and that's a, really admirable bunch of stats that
Kaiser Kuo:you rounded up and there's no arguing that there are similarities
Kaiser Kuo:in terms of just the dynamism.
Kaiser Kuo:Just the, vitality, the growth.
Kaiser Kuo:But I think that it's maybe as important to point out the, very big
Kaiser Kuo:differences in the way that these two states have, grown during that time.
Kaiser Kuo:I think not for just the United States during the Gilded Age, but For
Kaiser Kuo:the West in general, in the entire 300 years now, close on 300 years
Kaiser Kuo:since the, for stirrings of what we now call the Enlightenment, right?
Kaiser Kuo:there has just always been this idea.
Kaiser Kuo:it's the century before that.
Kaiser Kuo:In the time of Locke.
Kaiser Kuo:There's, who's really the sort of foundational thinker
Kaiser Kuo:for so many of these ideas.
Kaiser Kuo:and of course, Adam Smith, who comes later, but all these ideas are about,
Kaiser Kuo:they center on an emancipatory narrative.
Kaiser Kuo:the idea of,
Kaiser Kuo:of, the accrual, of wealth, of, the, of progress and prosperity and, and political
Kaiser Kuo:progress in, fact, all being about.
Kaiser Kuo:Individual emancipation from the state.
Kaiser Kuo:That's, been the central theme of this entire Western modernization experience.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that contrasts very sharply with what we've seen in China.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that the state plays a very different role, in, the Chinese context.
Kaiser Kuo:and that's one of the things I think that we really need to think seriously
Kaiser Kuo:about, that China's, ability to, like you said, replicate a lot of
Kaiser Kuo:those same miraculous growth numbers.
Kaiser Kuo:all that innovation is that's, that has not happened, in spite of the state as,
Kaiser Kuo:as much as people would like to say.
Kaiser Kuo:arguments all the time.
Kaiser Kuo:People objecting to this idea that China lifted.
Kaiser Kuo:800 million or however many people out of poverty, they, say, oh, no,
Kaiser Kuo:All the party did was get out of the way and allow the, the entrepreneurial
Kaiser Kuo:energies of Chinese people themselves.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that's incredibly naive.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that they, that, really, undersells massively and I think, distorts
Kaiser Kuo:the role that actually, the state played in creating a regulatory environment and
Kaiser Kuo:creating, in, in, directing investment in the way that it did, into the things
Kaiser Kuo:that actually did allow, a massive increase in, in productivity, a massive,
Kaiser Kuo:just the creation of so much wealth.
Kaiser Kuo:yeah, I, think that's, the big difference now.
Kaiser Kuo:there's been, there's a great book by Yuen Ang about, China's Gilded age that
Kaiser Kuo:sort of looked at these two gilded ages.
Kaiser Kuo:and there are a lot of other comparisons.
Kaiser Kuo:these are both times of, really extensive.
Kaiser Kuo:Of really, pervasive corruption, different forms of corruption.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that, in China you have this sort of access corruption that the
Kaiser Kuo:union talks about, really well, which in some senses greases the wheels.
Kaiser Kuo:Although as she's very, very quick to point out, short term kind of way, we
Kaiser Kuo:have seen a massive drop in the amount of corruption in China just because
Kaiser Kuo:of, in the last what close getting on 15 years now of, the anti-corruption
Kaiser Kuo:drive that, Xi Jinping launched in, 2013, as soon as he came into office.
Kaiser Kuo:yeah, I, think that there, there's the big differences in, in all sorts of ways,
Kaiser Kuo:especially on, in the role of the state.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, I can't tell you how often I still get that.
Jacob Shapiro:Really provincial perspective that you're talking about.
Jacob Shapiro:When I go in front of audiences or I speak to clients and they're thinking
Jacob Shapiro:that China is never going to be fundamentally innovative because of,
Jacob Shapiro:it's an authoritarian system that is led by a communist dictatorship and
Jacob Shapiro:everything else, and how much padding ourselves on the back and how much
Jacob Shapiro:complacency there is, which is, oh, there's no chance that China's ever
Jacob Shapiro:going to ascend to these global heights, even though it's, literally doing
Jacob Shapiro:it, in front of us in many ways has already ascended some of those heights.
Jacob Shapiro:Like the US capacity for self delusion in that sense, is relatively deep.
Jacob Shapiro:And I think that's one of the things you're really challenging.
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah.
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah.
Kaiser Kuo:It's that self-soothing, it's that copia thing that, But yeah, the
Kaiser Kuo:innovation thing, it, one of the things that I, didn't write about
Kaiser Kuo:this in the piece, but it's always puzzled me why this was the case.
Kaiser Kuo:I was working in the Chinese internet since, the, late 1990s.
Kaiser Kuo:And even then.
Kaiser Kuo:Even at a time when China's per capita GDP was lower than Mexico's or
Kaiser Kuo:Venezuela's or Argentinas, or Brazil's or turkeys, much lower by the way.
Kaiser Kuo:There was this weird expectation, that you, could discern from the
Kaiser Kuo:formulation of haha, China can only imitate its incapable of innovating.
Kaiser Kuo:What you see in there is that somehow China should be imitate,
Kaiser Kuo:should be innovating, right?
Kaiser Kuo:There was this expectation that it would be, but we never heard
Kaiser Kuo:where is Turkey's innovation?
Kaiser Kuo:Where is Brazil's innovation?
Kaiser Kuo:Where is the Mexican innovation?
Kaiser Kuo:Haha, Mexico's only capable of, no, we didn't hear that.
Kaiser Kuo:I, so I'm always, I was always puzzled as to where did this expectation that
Kaiser Kuo:China, should be imitate, in innovating at that, point in its development.
Kaiser Kuo:Where did that come from?
Kaiser Kuo:Why was it, that it Know, didn't meet our expectation and
Kaiser Kuo:therefore was worthy of, derision.
Kaiser Kuo:WI I'm, curious what your thoughts are on that because
Jacob Shapiro:it's,
Kaiser Kuo:a weird
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, I think you actually signpost it in the essay
Jacob Shapiro:and it makes me think of, we had Van Jackson on a couple months ago and
Jacob Shapiro:he talked about, yeah, I just, even
Kaiser Kuo:the other day, I love that guy, man.
Kaiser Kuo:I love that guy.
Jacob Shapiro:I love him too.
Jacob Shapiro:I've loved him since I was like a lonely analyst.
Jacob Shapiro:and I even when we had him on, I told him like, I feel like I'm talking to a legend.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause there were a bunch of us at this sort of more conservative leaning
Jacob Shapiro:private intelligence group, but we all just used to love, van stuff.
Jacob Shapiro:So it was best for me to have him on.
Jacob Shapiro:But he talked about, this element of white nationalism that is in
Jacob Shapiro:US foreign policy that might rub some listeners the wrong way.
Jacob Shapiro:But I, think it's demonstrably there and I think there's a much longer
Jacob Shapiro:history of that racial component with how the United States and how Americans
Jacob Shapiro:in general have thought about China.
Jacob Shapiro:And the Chinese going back quite some time.
Jacob Shapiro:just go back to the beginning of the Korean War.
Jacob Shapiro:The entire reason the Korean War goes off the rails is that Douglas MacArthur
Jacob Shapiro:has an extremely low estimation from a racial perspective of China
Jacob Shapiro:as a fighting people and as a race.
Jacob Shapiro:And that's why he thinks, oh, I'm just gonna go for it.
Jacob Shapiro:And I think that, I think you could map that onto just about anything.
Jacob Shapiro:there is some portion of the American psyche that sees China and has seen
Jacob Shapiro:China for over a hundred years as, oh, they're the far off competitor if they
Jacob Shapiro:ever woke up also like this, touching this great historical past and yet like
Jacob Shapiro:also this deep sense of inferiority and that they will never be able.
Jacob Shapiro:to rise up to that level.
Jacob Shapiro:And maybe there's an insecurity to it because the thing that has
Jacob Shapiro:allowed the United States to punch above its weight when it comes
Jacob Shapiro:to China, it's not demographics.
Jacob Shapiro:Like when the United States competed against Germany or Japan or Germany
Jacob Shapiro:and Japan at the same time, or the Soviet Union, the United States was
Jacob Shapiro:always the bigger country with better demographics, with better human capital,
Jacob Shapiro:with better resources, everything else.
Jacob Shapiro:And for the first time in American history, the US is now rubbing
Jacob Shapiro:shoulders with a power that outclass it in all those ways.
Jacob Shapiro:So the only thing the US has left, maybe the demographics,
Kaiser Kuo:I don't, we could have that argument.
Kaiser Kuo:short term at least.
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah, sure.
Kaiser Kuo:China at this point has a much larger population, but
Kaiser Kuo:yeah, it's not looking good.
Kaiser Kuo:but no, it's interesting that you raised this.
Kaiser Kuo:the, sort of white nationalist element of it, the race thing, because it
Kaiser Kuo:really cuts both ways as you just may maybe just suggested, on the one hand.
Kaiser Kuo:You have the kind of what Andy Lou wrote, about this in a great piece that he did
Kaiser Kuo:about, how he thought about the pandemic.
Kaiser Kuo:But there are these sort of two competing stereotypes.
Kaiser Kuo:There is what he calls the Oriental stereotype.
Kaiser Kuo:They're, poor and mired in poverty.
Kaiser Kuo:they're, backward, historically backward.
Kaiser Kuo:And then there's the, a Asiatic.
Kaiser Kuo:The Asiatic is, that sort of, soulless, but really hyper
Kaiser Kuo:competent, technologically advanced one, the, automaton, right?
Kaiser Kuo:the machine that it's, that, you know, that kid who plays violin better
Kaiser Kuo:than your kid and all that stuff.
Kaiser Kuo:And, but, somehow plays it soullessly.
Kaiser Kuo:and then we have both of these things competing.
Kaiser Kuo:and I think we saw that in, in the whole, how we've thought
Kaiser Kuo:about Chinese innovation, right?
Kaiser Kuo:we lurched from this.
Kaiser Kuo:China will never innovate anything, because, they're, Pedagogical system
Kaiser Kuo:and whatever, and to, oh, China's a 10 foot tall, like unstoppable
Kaiser Kuo:juggernaut, and it's going to eat our lunch, and they're out innovating us.
Kaiser Kuo:And it's just nuts how we think about these things.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:And it, doesn't even really reflect like the strengths that the US had.
Jacob Shapiro:louis gov posted a piece, recently, I'll, put this in the show notes too, where
Jacob Shapiro:he was talking about, he was basically positing a truce in the US China trade
Jacob Shapiro:war in the emergence of a G two world.
Jacob Shapiro:I won't step on that question 'cause that's something I
Jacob Shapiro:wanna get your take on as well.
Jacob Shapiro:But he goes back to raising the same question that you just said,
Jacob Shapiro:like, when did we start talking about, oh, like we innovate better?
Jacob Shapiro:And he talked about, how, at the end of, or in the middle of World
Jacob Shapiro:War ii, it was clear that German tiger tanks were technologically
Jacob Shapiro:superior to us Sherman tanks.
Jacob Shapiro:they were just better.
Jacob Shapiro:What was different was America's sheer production power.
Jacob Shapiro:He even quotes this German tank commander as saying, one of our tigers
Jacob Shapiro:is worth four of their Shermans, but the Americans always bring five.
Jacob Shapiro:which if you apply that to today.
Jacob Shapiro:it's the Chinese that are bringing five, if you wanna get to that, like sure.
Jacob Shapiro:Maybe the best chip or something like that is made in the United States.
Jacob Shapiro:It's funny,
Kaiser Kuo:you, say this is, it fits perfectly into a meme
Kaiser Kuo:that's going round in China.
Kaiser Kuo:The, phrase is chin.
Kaiser Kuo:so chin means the swarm, the masses.
Kaiser Kuo:they win over the titan, and it, comes from that Japanese anime attack on Titan.
Kaiser Kuo:This, which, you know, from the, Chinese dubs and subs of, that.
Kaiser Kuo:but this idea that the swarm beats the titan, it's very much
Kaiser Kuo:the Shermans beat the tiger.
Jacob Shapiro:which actually backs into one, one part that I wanted to ask you
Jacob Shapiro:about because I was struck in your essay, 'cause you're talking in some sense about
Jacob Shapiro:how, the examples of China's success and redefining modernity are about, con it's,
Jacob Shapiro:or you can find these signs and confidence in the intelligentsia in their building.
Jacob Shapiro:Massive amounts of infrastructure, their technological advancement,
Jacob Shapiro:the quality of life, the deployment of renewable energy, lifting people
Jacob Shapiro:out of poverty, everything else.
Jacob Shapiro:but I thought, and maybe this was just because you didn't have space,
Jacob Shapiro:'cause it was already 5,000 plus words and all of us, I guess have to.
Jacob Shapiro:Have to keep our readers in mind.
Jacob Shapiro:but there wasn't a whole lot of talk necessarily about Chinese
Jacob Shapiro:society itself or about how that mapped onto Chinese society.
Jacob Shapiro:And I wanna bring a, bring us back to that because if you go back again to that
Jacob Shapiro:period and after the Gilded Age, like in some sense, the most interesting part of
Jacob Shapiro:the Gilded Age to me is what it leads to.
Jacob Shapiro:Afterwards.
Jacob Shapiro:You talked about how it was the individual over the state, but in some
Jacob Shapiro:sense it was also the state over nature.
Jacob Shapiro:And you get this rise in the United States of both a government that is imposing,
Jacob Shapiro:this enlightenment writ over nature.
Jacob Shapiro:Like literal, literally physically remaking the geography of the country,
Jacob Shapiro:whether it's down here in the Mississippi River, to all sorts of other examples.
Jacob Shapiro:but then also just thinking in those terms and creating these social
Jacob Shapiro:groups within it that were willing to withstand all of that change.
Jacob Shapiro:Is there something analogous in your opinion, in terms of China, is there
Jacob Shapiro:some level at which society in China has also reformed or is going to reform in.
Jacob Shapiro:As a result of that growth.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm groping for the question there.
Jacob Shapiro:Hopefully you can pull, it out of me.
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah, no, I think let's, more literally to, to talk about your,
Kaiser Kuo:very interesting observation about the way that that, the relationship
Kaiser Kuo:between man and nature seem to have changed after that, period.
Kaiser Kuo:and, we do enter into that kind of high modernist idea.
Kaiser Kuo:China's had that for a very long time.
Kaiser Kuo:I think it has the advantage of having seen how that can go off
Kaiser Kuo:the rails and how bad it can go.
Kaiser Kuo:I lived in Beijing during, the, smoggy years, the, we had
Kaiser Kuo:airpocalypse in 2012 and 2013.
Kaiser Kuo:And, it's, just one of the, things that strikes anyone who used to live
Kaiser Kuo:there and who's gone back recently is just how much better the air is.
Kaiser Kuo:there is a, much deeper now environmental consciousness in, China.
Kaiser Kuo:There is this, and, they, claim, that it.
Kaiser Kuo:Plays into very old Chinese ideas, a about, harmony and balance
Kaiser Kuo:between humanity and nature.
Kaiser Kuo:I don't know how much that really is the case, but it certainly, it helps
Kaiser Kuo:the communication of the message.
Kaiser Kuo:and yeah, it, I think there's, it's, the, fact that China still remains,
Kaiser Kuo:it just, it went through just such a, phase of just horrifying.
Kaiser Kuo:Horrifying abuse of the natural environment.
Kaiser Kuo:and it, that it is rebounding from this, nicely is I think a really, good thing.
Kaiser Kuo:but again, it had the advantage of having watched what the rest of
Kaiser Kuo:the industrial world went through.
Kaiser Kuo:What, it knows not, just what London looked like in, the era of Dickens, but it
Kaiser Kuo:also saw, what, the United States looked like, and the brown pa Paul hungover
Kaiser Kuo:Los Angeles every day in the eighties.
Kaiser Kuo:and yeah, it's just, I think, really rethinking this, it's very
Kaiser Kuo:much built into the language.
Kaiser Kuo:They talk constantly.
Kaiser Kuo:this ecological civilization idea.
Kaiser Kuo:it's just really built into the KPIs of, all the officials now.
Kaiser Kuo:there are, decarbonization has become something of religion.
Kaiser Kuo:I think they really do believe that the whole, the organizing principle
Kaiser Kuo:of what they're doing right now is it is shifting onto a, found a
Kaiser Kuo:decarbonized industrial foundation.
Kaiser Kuo:That's, what they believe that China is, aiming at.
Kaiser Kuo:and that's, why they're so sensitive about criticisms about,
Kaiser Kuo:over capacity and in photovoltaics and, Wind and things like that.
Kaiser Kuo:And in EVs, I think we're doing the right thing here.
Kaiser Kuo:And why are people criticizing us?
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:before, before we leave history, and maybe getting to some of the vibe
Jacob Shapiro:shift and some of the other things, that bring us to the present day.
Jacob Shapiro:there, there was one other sort of comparison that I wanted to make or
Jacob Shapiro:get your take on, which is if you go back to, US history around this
Jacob Shapiro:time period that we're talking about,
Jacob Shapiro:it was not part of us political culture that the US was
Jacob Shapiro:going to be a global hegemon.
Jacob Shapiro:That it was gonna have alliance networks all over the world.
Jacob Shapiro:actually precisely the opposite, right?
Jacob Shapiro:Washington left the Republic with, we should have no permanent friends, allies.
Jacob Shapiro:And it took, it took Japan bombing Pearl Harbor to get.
Jacob Shapiro:Americans into the war.
Jacob Shapiro:FDR wanted to be into World War ii much sooner than that.
Jacob Shapiro:And, we talked about the copia and the innovation question.
Jacob Shapiro:The second question I always get, which I'm sure you get as well, is
Jacob Shapiro:when is China gonna invade Taiwan?
Jacob Shapiro:And how is that gonna affect me?
Jacob Shapiro:And I always roll my eyes at that question and give my flippant response.
Jacob Shapiro:the US didn't want to be an empire either.
Jacob Shapiro:And there is some part of me that is a little bit chased in
Jacob Shapiro:thinking about, do geopolitical realities force a country like the
Jacob Shapiro:United States and the 19 hundreds?
Jacob Shapiro:Does it force China today to behave in an imperial way that is not
Jacob Shapiro:necessarily coded into the DNA of the state or, of the people itself?
Jacob Shapiro:Do you think that's a, is it a cautionary tale for China?
Jacob Shapiro:Is it a path in front of it?
Jacob Shapiro:Is it an inevitability?
Jacob Shapiro:I, just wanted to get your take on, how China's interacting
Jacob Shapiro:with that portion of modernity.
Jacob Shapiro:Because the West very clearly went off and conquered a bunch of people and
Jacob Shapiro:subjugated them in order to continue its lease on, Power China being one
Jacob Shapiro:of those countries in some sense.
Jacob Shapiro:So it had a front row seat for it.
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah, I, it's a really terrific question.
Kaiser Kuo:I don't know if you've read Stephen Word Times' book on the subject.
Kaiser Kuo:he, really talks about, how the United States in, the, immediate aftermath,
Kaiser Kuo:during the Second World War, it made a very deliberate decision to become,
Kaiser Kuo:to pursue hegemony, to become, all the things that it is, the indispensable
Kaiser Kuo:nation, the arsenal of democracy, all the things, the shining city on the hill.
Kaiser Kuo:It, decided to do that.
Kaiser Kuo:this was not in historical inevitability.
Kaiser Kuo:It was not compelled in any sort of,
Kaiser Kuo:sense that would strip it of agency.
Kaiser Kuo:It was, a, willful decision to take up the mantle.
Kaiser Kuo:I would argue that there are definitely identifiable strands in, the American
Kaiser Kuo:sort of political culture in our DNA that.
Kaiser Kuo:Already were there, that would've made that an easier decision to make.
Kaiser Kuo:But I don't, I, again, I would agree with wartime.
Kaiser Kuo:I don't think it was historical inevitability.
Kaiser Kuo:There are people who deny that China has those strands in its DNA, I don't deny it.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that those are,
Kaiser Kuo:present probably in, in the Chinese DNA too.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that there, there has been, there have been times when the
Kaiser Kuo:worldview has been extraordinarily sinus centric where it really does
Kaiser Kuo:have, a belief in its, a moral calling.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that China, in recent years, the form that its exceptionalism
Kaiser Kuo:takes is very particular.
Kaiser Kuo:It isn't expansive, it isn't universalizing, it's, in fact it's
Kaiser Kuo:the opposite of, it's slapping the label Chinese characteristics on
Kaiser Kuo:everything and, suggesting, Hey, look.
Kaiser Kuo:this is a Chinese thing y'all wouldn't understand.
Kaiser Kuo:this is sure we have this alternative path that we have, tread toward modernity,
Kaiser Kuo:but this doesn't mean that you, you, Mr. Sub-Saharan African country or
Kaiser Kuo:you South Asian or Southeast Asian nation, would be similarly equipped.
Kaiser Kuo:Maybe some of the things that we've done, are replicable, like maybe a real
Kaiser Kuo:big emphasis on, on, construction of infrastructure would be a, good approach.
Kaiser Kuo:But we don't think this is necessarily a replicable now.
Kaiser Kuo:I don't think that's immutable.
Kaiser Kuo:I don't think that, that, that is an essential characteristic
Kaiser Kuo:of China or the Chinese.
Kaiser Kuo:I think this, these things change over time and I can easily envision a
Kaiser Kuo:moment where, historical circumstance would conspire to empower the forces
Kaiser Kuo:that do want to transcend that particularism and do go universalist.
Kaiser Kuo:do I think that is the likely trajectory right now?
Kaiser Kuo:Not, no.
Kaiser Kuo:No, not at all.
Kaiser Kuo:Not in the short term.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that China has very limited power projection ambitions.
Kaiser Kuo:I think it is still primarily defensive.
Kaiser Kuo:it just wants to be able to do its own thing without being hectored
Kaiser Kuo:and browbeat and criticized.
Kaiser Kuo:And, it, it is not interested in taking the place of the United States
Kaiser Kuo:as some sort of global hedge fund.
Kaiser Kuo:Does it want serious influence?
Kaiser Kuo:It denies that it does, but that's.
Kaiser Kuo:It's pretty clear that it, that's what it wants.
Kaiser Kuo:does it want, to, to, make a world that is safe for autocracy,
Kaiser Kuo:a more multi polar world?
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah, I think that's, the, size of it right now.
Kaiser Kuo:again, subject to change.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:I just hope we're never talking about hegemony with Chinese characteristics.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause I happen to agree with you.
Jacob Shapiro:I don't think that's gonna happen, but I also have enough self-awareness to
Jacob Shapiro:know that if I was an analyst in 1890s United States, I'd probably be writing
Jacob Shapiro:the exact same papers that there's, there is no American hegemony and, not being
Jacob Shapiro:able to predict things going from there.
Jacob Shapiro:but what you talked about is a perfect segue, I think, into the vibe shift.
Jacob Shapiro:and it is absolutely a vibe shift.
Jacob Shapiro:let me just give you, give the listeners a couple.
Jacob Shapiro:Quotes to show you.
Jacob Shapiro:So this is President Trump on Truth Social.
Jacob Shapiro:The G two will be convening shortly.
Jacob Shapiro:this meeting will lead to everlasting peace and success.
Jacob Shapiro:God bless both China and the USAI joked on x. I don't know how Lee Greenwood's
Jacob Shapiro:gonna fit that into the song, but they're gonna have to figure it out somehow.
Jacob Shapiro:Marco Rubio says that US China ties are entering a new
Jacob Shapiro:phase of strategic stability.
Jacob Shapiro:Pete Hegseth, I love that this, he was talking about how President Trump
Jacob Shapiro:had set the tone for everlasting peace and success and depart.
Jacob Shapiro:The Department of War will do the same.
Jacob Shapiro:So love the Department of War, setting the tone for everlasting peace and success.
Jacob Shapiro:That's great.
Kaiser Kuo:Peace through shrink baby.
Jacob Shapiro:I guess so.
Jacob Shapiro:But even Xi Jin Pig, at the meeting, at the opening remarks
Jacob Shapiro:of the Trump XI meeting.
Jacob Shapiro:We talked about how it's normal for two leading economies to have
Jacob Shapiro:friction in the waste, in the, face of winds and waves and challenges.
Jacob Shapiro:We should, ensure the steady sailing forth of the giant ship of China US relations.
Jacob Shapiro:So you've been on the vibe shift earlier, I think, than most I want to
Jacob Shapiro:ask you, is it, more than a vibe shift?
Jacob Shapiro:Is it really about, moving towards a US China G two world?
Jacob Shapiro:The way that Trump has suggested is it, we're really in a multipolar world
Jacob Shapiro:and China views this as a part of it.
Jacob Shapiro:what do you think the implications are of the vibe shift is?
Jacob Shapiro:Is it anything more than rhetorical?
Jacob Shapiro:Are we just gonna be here in a year's time when all of the agreements that
Jacob Shapiro:they made and sold, basically, expire?
Jacob Shapiro:'cause most of these things are just kicking the can down the road to 26.
Jacob Shapiro:how do you approach that
Kaiser Kuo:question?
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah.
Kaiser Kuo:No, I, don't think that it's permanent or even necessarily enduring.
Kaiser Kuo:I think it'll, we're still, We haven't hit the, apogee of it.
Kaiser Kuo:I think things will continue to warm for a little while before they don't.
Kaiser Kuo:look, there's, we have the most changeable person ever, most mutable persona in the,
Kaiser Kuo:Oval Office that we've had in memory.
Kaiser Kuo:So one thing I would not impute to him is any sort of enduring or permanent nature.
Kaiser Kuo:It could, it, it's changeable as him.
Kaiser Kuo:it's, it, things could go, very, differently, but,
Kaiser Kuo:they've trended this way.
Kaiser Kuo:I think there are things that will endure a little more.
Kaiser Kuo:I think I draw attention to how the youth demographics, in most of the
Kaiser Kuo:polling that we've, seen, the younger folk, they, their attitudes toward
Kaiser Kuo:China have shifted the furthest.
Kaiser Kuo:And because this is the case, because this is happening in relatively formative.
Kaiser Kuo:Times of their lives.
Kaiser Kuo:These are likely to be ideas that stay with them when they are, at the
Kaiser Kuo:peak of their earning potential and the peak of their political influence
Kaiser Kuo:and the peak of their importance in the American body politic.
Kaiser Kuo:that is to say, 20 years from now, these people might still
Kaiser Kuo:have with them relatively congenial attitudes toward China.
Kaiser Kuo:the other thing about it is that, that I, think that I recognize
Kaiser Kuo:that you've just cited a bunch of, Republican politicians who have
Kaiser Kuo:said very warm things about China.
Kaiser Kuo:I would add that, that, the, Chicago Council poll that just came out at
Kaiser Kuo:the, end of October shows pretty clearly that, that it is even
Kaiser Kuo:more pronounced among Democrats.
Kaiser Kuo:Democrats are much, much less likely to have hawkish attitudes toward China.
Kaiser Kuo:We're seeing something interesting happening.
Kaiser Kuo:I, don't think that it will necessarily endure.
Kaiser Kuo:I hope that it will as long as, as, we can make it, there are a lot of secular
Kaiser Kuo:changes that are happening that militate against it, but, I'll take it for now.
Jacob Shapiro:how do you we have things like the Chicago Council poll and, Pew
Jacob Shapiro:data and things like that for Americans.
Jacob Shapiro:And it's been inter it's, interesting if you watch Americans over the last
Jacob Shapiro:10 years, young Americans were fairly optimistic about China into the middle of
Jacob Shapiro:Obama's second turn, and then starts to go really American views of China starts
Jacob Shapiro:to nose dive into that second portion of the second part of Obama's, second term.
Jacob Shapiro:And then, Donald Trump, even Joe Biden.
Jacob Shapiro:And then it, you're right, it has been coming around.
Jacob Shapiro:Do you.
Jacob Shapiro:How, do you gauge how like the sort of average Chinese
Jacob Shapiro:person is thinking about that?
Jacob Shapiro:Is, there a way for you to
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah.
Kaiser Kuo:Test
Jacob Shapiro:that?
Kaiser Kuo:There, there are analogous polls that are conducted,
Kaiser Kuo:to, try to survey Chinese attitudes toward the United States.
Kaiser Kuo:And, I don't have them in front of me right now.
Kaiser Kuo:I can't quote, but, I, the upshot is there's still considerable
Kaiser Kuo:warmth, of feeling toward the notional American people.
Kaiser Kuo:but I think there's, this idea that it's pretty hardened now in, in, among
Kaiser Kuo:not just strategic elites in China, but among ordinary people that irrespective
Kaiser Kuo:of what party is in the White House or dominates in Congress, there, the
Kaiser Kuo:American, government notionally, Is hell bent on keeping China on its knees,
Kaiser Kuo:does not want to see China's rise.
Kaiser Kuo:Is does, wants to slow China's progress, wants to stymie it
Kaiser Kuo:and is implacably hostile.
Kaiser Kuo:there, there's the, mirror image of what you often hear from, Americans mostly is
Kaiser Kuo:a fig leaf, but I love the Chinese people.
Kaiser Kuo:I just can't stand the Chinese Communist Party.
Kaiser Kuo:but anyway, you hear the same sort of thing.
Kaiser Kuo:Same thing from, Chinese.
Kaiser Kuo:I, again, I haven't, I don't have the pulse in front of you,
Kaiser Kuo:but, if I recall correctly, there, things blow hot and cold.
Kaiser Kuo:there's, probably a corresponding change right now in, in Chinese
Kaiser Kuo:attitudes toward the United States.
Jacob Shapiro:Do you think there's also a sense of chi the sort of
Jacob Shapiro:G two versus multipolar thesis?
Jacob Shapiro:'cause I recognize that, president Trump has ideas.
Jacob Shapiro:That just flash across his brain and probably G two came across and
Jacob Shapiro:he decided he was gonna tweet it.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause it was a, it was the moment for it.
Jacob Shapiro:There was probably no strategic intent in it.
Jacob Shapiro:But, for somebody who studies policy, like you see G two in the, in a
Jacob Shapiro:tweet from the president of the United States, you stop a little bit.
Jacob Shapiro:That's different, right?
Jacob Shapiro:You do than the things that came before.
Jacob Shapiro:And the administration has really dropped, talk of the Indo-Pacific.
Jacob Shapiro:It's more Asia Pacific or it's, it's been much nicer with China than it
Jacob Shapiro:has been arguably with reasonable ally, with regional allies and
Jacob Shapiro:allies that are closer to home.
Jacob Shapiro:I thought the Chinese messaging was much more, yeah, it's fine to have a
Jacob Shapiro:G two conversation amidst a multipolar world, which is where we're headed,
Jacob Shapiro:which is that spheres of influence thing, that you were speaking about earlier.
Jacob Shapiro:do you, yeah, I just wanted to give you a chance to Yeah, I,
Kaiser Kuo:think obviously it's flattering both through the American ego
Kaiser Kuo:and to the Chinese ego to think that, these are the two nations that will
Kaiser Kuo:decide, bilaterally the fate of the world.
Kaiser Kuo:That's, of course, that's nonsense.
Kaiser Kuo:And, yeah, China, as you say, it.
Kaiser Kuo:The world that it wants is a very much a multipolar one.
Kaiser Kuo:it's one where, American hegemony is tamed, America is
Kaiser Kuo:still one of the important poll.
Kaiser Kuo:That's the, they're realistic enough to recognize that America is not
Kaiser Kuo:going into eclipse anytime soon.
Kaiser Kuo:no, I, think that,
Kaiser Kuo:the, G two framing, insofar as he took it up, it's because he, just
Kaiser Kuo:wants to go along to get along.
Kaiser Kuo:He doesn't believe in it.
Kaiser Kuo:Of course, it is a very flattering thing, but you never hear
Kaiser Kuo:that talk come out of, China.
Kaiser Kuo:Now you don't hear that talk come out of China.
Kaiser Kuo:But it must be said that, the.
Kaiser Kuo:The way that so many issues in the world are end up being framed.
Kaiser Kuo:Everything behind everything.
Kaiser Kuo:Lu l is lurks the shadow of the United States.
Kaiser Kuo:So that, that's the Paul that hangs over every conversation about any geopolitical
Kaiser Kuo:issue is this sort of The bilateral relationship between China and the us.
Kaiser Kuo:So while they would never come out and pronounce G two, it, does
Kaiser Kuo:infuse a lot of their thinking.
Jacob Shapiro:this is this next question you'll probably have to
Jacob Shapiro:answer on two if not more levels.
Jacob Shapiro:but it's a question of trying to get to just how, I don't know, core Marxism is
Jacob Shapiro:to Chinese thought on this particular question because if we, were being
Jacob Shapiro:good Marxists, I think the point of view would be that the US is going
Jacob Shapiro:to be eclipse, that the capitalist world is beset with internal conflicts
Jacob Shapiro:that Donald Trump is a manifestation of late stage capitalism, that those
Jacob Shapiro:internal conflicts will generate wars and that China itself is probably living
Jacob Shapiro:through in an age of, capitalistic encirclement until it gets to when all
Jacob Shapiro:the capitalist countries gang up on each other and have those internal wars.
Jacob Shapiro:to, to what extent do you think that.
Jacob Shapiro:That Marxist view of the world is in, a Chinese leadership, those top
Jacob Shapiro:echelons, and then b the average Chinese person on the street.
Jacob Shapiro:Do you think they're thinking in terms of that inevitable
Jacob Shapiro:decline of the capitalist world?
Jacob Shapiro:Or am I using, the language of yester years that really isn't there?
Jacob Shapiro:That the, form might be there in terms of Chinese politics, but
Jacob Shapiro:the content is completely changed?
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah, it's not there.
Kaiser Kuo:that's not how they think.
Kaiser Kuo:That's absolutely not, how they structure their, approach to questions like this.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that, there are.
Kaiser Kuo:Elements in Marxism, just dialect, dialectical materialism
Kaiser Kuo:is still there, to some extent.
Kaiser Kuo:But you have just exhibited a, more sophisticated knowledge of Marxism than
Kaiser Kuo:just about any ordinary Chinese person.
Kaiser Kuo:seriously, there's, very little, it's, what, reigns in China?
Kaiser Kuo:there, there are, it's a lot more Leninist than it is actually Marxist.
Kaiser Kuo:There's, Marxism is conveniently used and this whole entire project of reform
Kaiser Kuo:is justified in the language of Marxism.
Kaiser Kuo:they're doing this act of historical infill when the bourgeois mode of
Kaiser Kuo:production, when, the, the, capitalist mode of production was supposed to.
Kaiser Kuo:Create a material abundance.
Kaiser Kuo:And in 1949, arguably China did not have anything close to material abundance
Kaiser Kuo:when its communist revolution took hold.
Kaiser Kuo:D'S Hall re reason reasoning for, wanting to pursue this a hundred plus years
Kaiser Kuo:of capitalism was that, Ostensibly, this would make up for what capitalism
Kaiser Kuo:failed to do in the earlier go round.
Kaiser Kuo:But this time, with a little bit of control from the state ma making sure that
Kaiser Kuo:it didn't, work its excesses too badly.
Kaiser Kuo:So yeah, it's, when it's convenient, they'll invoke Marxism.
Kaiser Kuo:I, think that, we just have to not think in binary categories,
Kaiser Kuo:either Marxism or not Marxism.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that, when it comes to China, it's so syncretic.
Kaiser Kuo:There are so many.
Kaiser Kuo:Weird little things that have entered in, into the, functioning
Kaiser Kuo:Chinese state ideology right now.
Kaiser Kuo:you can rattle off a really long list of what they are, foremost among them.
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah, of course, the Leninist political structure that remains very much in place.
Kaiser Kuo:But I, I would say that just as importantly, it is a kind of Singaporean
Kaiser Kuo:style technocratic authoritarian state.
Kaiser Kuo:it's obviously as, huge elements of state capitalism, but
Kaiser Kuo:also of neoliberalism itself.
Kaiser Kuo:it very much understands the dynamism of
Kaiser Kuo:minimally regulated.
Kaiser Kuo:Laissez-faire kind of, market forces.
Kaiser Kuo:it definitely appreciates that there's a huge layer of, Confucian, patriarchal,
Kaiser Kuo:kind of social harmony and all that stuff that goes in the, emphasis on
Kaiser Kuo:the Confucian family system and on, on harmonious social relations that hardly
Kaiser Kuo:seems compatible with, Marxism with, its, emphasis on class struggle there.
Kaiser Kuo:There's a whole bunch and, I think that, none of it makes sense.
Kaiser Kuo:if you are a, rigid kind of ideological purist.
Kaiser Kuo:None of it.
Kaiser Kuo:Is compatible.
Kaiser Kuo:and that's what makes it work.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:you've actually just given, I've thought this in general, but you've actually
Jacob Shapiro:just given the ideological, background for why there isn't gonna be a second
Jacob Shapiro:us or why there isn't gonna be a second cold war between the US and China,
Jacob Shapiro:because to your point, Marxism, taken in its purest form is universalizing.
Jacob Shapiro:It has to be universalizing.
Jacob Shapiro:It's a completely universalizing sense of the word.
Jacob Shapiro:And you've talked eloquently about how that's not.
Jacob Shapiro:That's not, we're talking about Leninism with Chinese characteristics.
Jacob Shapiro:That's right.
Jacob Shapiro:It's a much more specific thing, so it's not gonna get there.
Jacob Shapiro:And to your point about, economics, I was joking on a podcast the other day.
Jacob Shapiro:if Ronald Reagan came back, today, he'd probably find more in, in Xi Jinping's
Jacob Shapiro:supply side reforms than he does in Donald Trump's protectionism in terms of
Jacob Shapiro:things that he could, hang his hat on.
Jacob Shapiro:Although we should
Kaiser Kuo:be careful.
Kaiser Kuo:the confusing terminology supply side, what he's not talking about when she
Kaiser Kuo:talks about supply side reform, he, has nothing to do with Arthur Laffer.
Kaiser Kuo:And the idea that, tax receipts will actually go up if tax rates
Kaiser Kuo:go down because, high taxes are crowding out, investment.
Kaiser Kuo:And that's not, what he's talking about at all.
Kaiser Kuo:when the Chinese talk about supply side, they talk about basically,
Kaiser Kuo:improving the ability to cre to make more attractive consumer goods.
Kaiser Kuo:And that's what you know, as a stimulus for consumption rather than handouts.
Kaiser Kuo:Rather than stimulating the demand side.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, that, that's actually you, said that in a thread on X, and
Jacob Shapiro:I'm sure you've said it in other places.
Jacob Shapiro:I think that's also an incredibly sharp critique because when you get
Jacob Shapiro:the Western point of view in the pages of the Economist or the Wall
Jacob Shapiro:Street Journal, it's so strange to me.
Jacob Shapiro:They will.
Jacob Shapiro:They will land base China for being fiscally irresponsible and
Jacob Shapiro:all the debt that China carries around the debt of the provinces.
Jacob Shapiro:And this is a, house of cars that's waiting to fall in on itself.
Jacob Shapiro:And yet they're also banging on the table for, and you have to stimulate now 'cause
Jacob Shapiro:you have to have more consumption now.
Jacob Shapiro:'cause otherwise the Chinese economy is gonna collapse.
Jacob Shapiro:and to your point, that's not the way that China is thinking about it.
Jacob Shapiro:It's not the policies that they're voting through.
Kaiser Kuo:That's right.
Jacob Shapiro:That's right.
Jacob Shapiro:And I, and they're doing the more responsible thing.
Jacob Shapiro:They're letting a real estate bubble pop because they are trying to do the
Jacob Shapiro:thing that if you were just thinking about, fastidious, fiscally conservative
Jacob Shapiro:policy, like what they're doing probably is much more at home than just
Jacob Shapiro:helicoptering cash all over the place.
Kaiser Kuo:there are all sorts of reasons why they're not able
Kaiser Kuo:simply to deliver gigantic con.
Kaiser Kuo:But first of all, it's almost played out.
Kaiser Kuo:They've had this sort of, cash for clunkers deal with, you can take your,
Kaiser Kuo:old energy inefficient refrigerator and turn it in and get a, a new one,
Kaiser Kuo:at, with at, huge discount or your car, whatever, trade in your, old internal
Kaiser Kuo:combustion vehicle, get a huge discount on an, on a, any, a shiny new ev.
Kaiser Kuo:but yeah, that's run its course pretty much.
Kaiser Kuo:Lizzie Lee has pointed out that, a lot of the people for whom that
Kaiser Kuo:kind of stimulus would, actually be effective, that would translate
Kaiser Kuo:directly into consumption, are unbanked.
Kaiser Kuo:So it's hard to just even affect the actual transfers.
Kaiser Kuo:nobody has checking accounts in, China.
Kaiser Kuo:When they have accounts at all.
Kaiser Kuo:You know what I mean?
Kaiser Kuo:they would just, they're all electronic.
Kaiser Kuo:the other, thing about this is I think, and this is something that,
Kaiser Kuo:it came from a conversation I had with, and I've talked about this
Kaiser Kuo:before, but it just sticks with me.
Kaiser Kuo:And I think it's just such an important thing to get out, is
Kaiser Kuo:like, if one of the big things that people buy that's a huge marker of
Kaiser Kuo:consumption, is automobiles, right?
Kaiser Kuo:a, along with your, housing, of course your car is, one of
Kaiser Kuo:the big expenditures, right?
Kaiser Kuo:And not nobody buys a car every year, but you buy a car, What if you live in a city
Kaiser Kuo:with fantastically good urban transit systems, where it's basically frictionless
Kaiser Kuo:for you to go from home to the office.
Kaiser Kuo:You get on, a a, bike share bike, which is reliably to be found right outside
Kaiser Kuo:the door of your, apartment building.
Kaiser Kuo:You ride the kilometer and a half to the subway station,
Kaiser Kuo:it's not much further ever.
Kaiser Kuo:You jump in the subway, it costs you basically nothing to, ride the thing.
Kaiser Kuo:it's going to suppress consumption.
Kaiser Kuo:It's gonna suppress consumption of an automobile.
Kaiser Kuo:So where does the fact that the government, the municipal government or
Kaiser Kuo:paid for this very expensive, sometimes even loss making subway system, where
Kaiser Kuo:does that show up in, in GDP accounting?
Kaiser Kuo:and, so I, I think sometimes the, emphasis on consumption is misplaced.
Kaiser Kuo:And, yeah, to your point, we, why do we always bang on about that?
Kaiser Kuo:and, at the same, in the same breath, criticize China for its,
Kaiser Kuo:really, high debt to GDP ratio.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:the, one thing I wanted to ask you also that I, don't think came through
Jacob Shapiro:in the, or, I was wondering about this, in the context of reading,
Jacob Shapiro:what you recently wrote was about the role of Xi Jinping himself.
Jacob Shapiro:he's concentrated power.
Jacob Shapiro:we can argue is it since d is it since Mao?
Jacob Shapiro:Is he something completely new?
Jacob Shapiro:But like he's concentrated a significant amount of power in his
Jacob Shapiro:person to the point that he at least seems to me like a single point of
Jacob Shapiro:failure in China's political system.
Jacob Shapiro:like it's hard for me to imagine if he slipped on a banana peel
Jacob Shapiro:tomorrow, or if something happened and he was incapacitated and
Jacob Shapiro:could not, fulfill his role.
Jacob Shapiro:I, have serious questions about whether China's political
Jacob Shapiro:culture, its political machinery.
Jacob Shapiro:Could it absorb that shock?
Jacob Shapiro:What does, that actually look like inside the Chinese Communist Party?
Jacob Shapiro:maybe it's a question that nobody can answer, but I wanted to get
Jacob Shapiro:your, especially in the, in what you were talking about in terms of the
Jacob Shapiro:context of China and modernity and, the politics that they've created.
Jacob Shapiro:Am I being too simplistic?
Jacob Shapiro:Do you think Xi Jinping is that single point of failure?
Jacob Shapiro:Do you think that China's political logic can outlive him if something
Jacob Shapiro:were to happen to him or, is this in some ways a big threat for China?
Jacob Shapiro:The brittleness of, succession planning for after the person who
Jacob Shapiro:is authored these huge changes?
Kaiser Kuo:So I guess it's a matter of principle.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that anything that we as relatively uninformed outsiders can think
Kaiser Kuo:of as like a potential gigantic threat to the system threat they have thought of.
Kaiser Kuo:It's not like there's, just because we don't see the process, just
Kaiser Kuo:because we don't know what it's outcomes have been, doesn't mean
Kaiser Kuo:that process is not happening.
Kaiser Kuo:if there is one thing that we can rely on with China, it's that they've
Kaiser Kuo:thought through a lot of this shit that they've thought through a lot of it, I
Kaiser Kuo:do not think that there, there's nobody.
Kaiser Kuo:Thinking about succession, there's nobody not thinking, there's that.
Kaiser Kuo:There's, I don't think there's,
Kaiser Kuo:Not a single person in Beijing thinking about that banana peel.
Kaiser Kuo:it's there.
Kaiser Kuo:so that said, look, we don't know.
Kaiser Kuo:We don't know anything about it.
Kaiser Kuo:he's, they play that extremely close to their chest.
Kaiser Kuo:they don't want us to know.
Kaiser Kuo:and the reason they don't want to is, there's obvious reasons.
Kaiser Kuo:They, don't want rival power centers.
Kaiser Kuo:they, they see historically what's happened when there
Kaiser Kuo:are anointed successors.
Kaiser Kuo:she entered into a office in, in, in a very complicated situation.
Kaiser Kuo:Where, there had been rival power centers that had been building up,
Kaiser Kuo:not just, his own, but, they had the knives out when he came into office.
Kaiser Kuo:there they were quite entrenched interest groups that were very, powerful,
Kaiser Kuo:including somebody who had the entire security portfolio who out for him.
Kaiser Kuo:so I guess it makes a lot of sense that they would be a little more paranoid
Kaiser Kuo:about that, that they would not be, Telegraphing their intentions on the
Kaiser Kuo:issue of succession all the time.
Kaiser Kuo:So the, point of single point of failure.
Kaiser Kuo:I think there are a little, again there I want to credit Lizzie for,
Kaiser Kuo:bringing up this idea, but I, heard it again from, a very smart analyst
Kaiser Kuo:named Jonathan Zinn, who I interviewed.
Kaiser Kuo:and he'd written about this and there have been others who've talked about
Kaiser Kuo:this single point of failure idea.
Kaiser Kuo:I actually think that A him surrounding himself with what, many Western
Kaiser Kuo:analysts have dismissed as mere Yes men.
Kaiser Kuo:you could read it another way, as John Zin did, as Lizzie Lee does.
Kaiser Kuo:She's thinks, actually he's surrounded himself with people who he's worked
Kaiser Kuo:with long enough that there's a degree of trust there, that he's,
Kaiser Kuo:they're able to say the uncomfortable truths that other people might not,
Kaiser Kuo:because, they are close enough to him.
Kaiser Kuo:and, they can both point to two instances of, learning.
Kaiser Kuo:on that, of course reversal.
Kaiser Kuo:the, there's an awful lot of path dependency and this as assumption
Kaiser Kuo:of a lot of inertia on the part of, China, and there's reason to,
Kaiser Kuo:see that, to, to, believe that.
Kaiser Kuo:There's also periods of quite remarkable reversal that are possible just as
Kaiser Kuo:we've seen in the United States with somebody like Trump, that can overcome
Kaiser Kuo:institutional inertia pretty quickly.
Kaiser Kuo:The other thing is and again, this is something that, that now I'm starting
Kaiser Kuo:to hear other people say, but I've been saying for quite some time, is that the
Kaiser Kuo:fact of sea having irrigated to himself so much power and being that single point
Kaiser Kuo:of failure also means that he is, there's nobody who the buck stops with him.
Kaiser Kuo:He can't blame anyone else.
Kaiser Kuo:when something goes horribly, catastrophically wrong.
Kaiser Kuo:Let's say he decides he wants to take Taiwan back by force tomorrow.
Kaiser Kuo:What happens when, Taiwanese missile defense systems start
Kaiser Kuo:bringing down Chinese fighters?
Kaiser Kuo:What happens when, Chinese amphibious landing crafts are, blown
Kaiser Kuo:up in the strait and thousands, hundreds of tons of thousands die.
Kaiser Kuo:that.
Kaiser Kuo:Is something he would not accept.
Kaiser Kuo:I think the, risk of that, I think, it's, more of a curb on
Kaiser Kuo:any adventurism than it is a God.
Kaiser Kuo:I think the assumption that his irrigation of power is a God to
Kaiser Kuo:adventurism is probably wrong.
Kaiser Kuo:That's probably something we need to rethink.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah, that's a, very good and sharp corrective.
Jacob Shapiro:and I take it and I'll now turn the question and ask you in this sense,
Jacob Shapiro:and this is a question I grapple with constantly, not just in terms of
Jacob Shapiro:China, in terms of, you could ask this question literally about any country or
Jacob Shapiro:political system in the world, which is to say, to what extent is Xi Jinping.
Jacob Shapiro:Representative a symptom of what, of the changes that are happening in China in
Jacob Shapiro:general versus how much of what China has done over the last 10, 12 years.
Jacob Shapiro:Would you ascribe to him pushing China in a particular direction?
Jacob Shapiro:I, shy away from the great man theory, but he does seem to be like
Jacob Shapiro:an incredibly important figure.
Jacob Shapiro:but is he again, is, he, a symptom?
Jacob Shapiro:Is he a representative in the same way that Donald Trump is a
Jacob Shapiro:representative of something that is happening in the United States?
Jacob Shapiro:Or is he somebody who is rising above and say no, like we were off course
Jacob Shapiro:and I, through force of personality and all other things will shift the ship.
Jacob Shapiro:Even if it's just a little bit like if you can do it, like it's, such a shift.
Jacob Shapiro:How do you think about what he's accomplished, and his role in that sense?
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah.
Kaiser Kuo:The thing about Great Man theory.
Kaiser Kuo:my, my instinct is always to, to like the great tol story question in the
Kaiser Kuo:appendix is to war and peace, right?
Kaiser Kuo:I, tend to like you, I'm shy, I shy away from it.
Kaiser Kuo:But the thing about it is that often the people who are these political actors
Kaiser Kuo:about whom we are asking these questions, they very much do believe in it.
Kaiser Kuo:They do see themselves as this sort of, Carlisle and great man figure, historical
Kaiser Kuo:figure who is capable through, a force of will to enact, enduring political change.
Kaiser Kuo:I have no doubt that she seems, sees himself in that mode.
Kaiser Kuo:He does not wake up every morning and think, yeah, it's interesting
Kaiser Kuo:the confluence of historical forces that have pushed me.
Kaiser Kuo:he doesn't think that at all.
Kaiser Kuo:he thinks that he, acts, with under the belief that his will, has a, an outsized
Kaiser Kuo:impact on the direction of the country.
Kaiser Kuo:and
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah.
Kaiser Kuo:it's one of those, it's one of those weird things, right?
Kaiser Kuo:it might not have been there, but for the fact that people believe that it's there.
Kaiser Kuo:and no, he, I, can look at all sorts of reasons, why I would've
Kaiser Kuo:predicted the rise of a c like figure, prior to him coming into power.
Kaiser Kuo:I think a lot of great minds have really looked at the decade, that
Kaiser Kuo:began in, after, say, 2001, and, recognized that this deliberate,
Kaiser Kuo:collective leadership that they created did a lot of good things, but it also
Kaiser Kuo:created a lot of really bad problems.
Kaiser Kuo:And that by the, as the decade near, near its end, there was
Kaiser Kuo:a real consensus that it, that.
Kaiser Kuo:Had run its course that was no longer good work, that we needed
Kaiser Kuo:more consolidation of leadership.
Kaiser Kuo:That, that, that it was inevitably, in a sense, going to go into a, direction
Kaiser Kuo:that was way more centralized, that was way more internally repressive,
Kaiser Kuo:that was probably going to be way more internationally assertive.
Kaiser Kuo:and so I think a, c would have happened irrespective if it hadn't
Kaiser Kuo:been him, if it had been Boise lie.
Kaiser Kuo:I think the, policies might have been, there would've been slightly different
Kaiser Kuo:melodies, but it would've been in the same key and time signature.
Jacob Shapiro:do you think that a leader like that, I mean if we're thinking
Jacob Shapiro:out 10, 15, 20 years down the road and thinking about where China is now and
Jacob Shapiro:trying to extrapolate what future Chinese leadership looks like, do you think that
Jacob Shapiro:the function of a, XI or a BGI I figure is to, in a sense course correct, and
Jacob Shapiro:then hand the baton back off to a reformed more collective system of governance?
Jacob Shapiro:Or do you think that, that she represents an early stage in centralization
Jacob Shapiro:and consolidation and that he will hand a baton off to somebody who
Jacob Shapiro:will have to centralize more in order to deal with what's coming?
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah, it's a great question, but I think there's one gigantic exogenous
Kaiser Kuo:variable that gets overlooked a lot.
Kaiser Kuo:And I think that it is really decisive in what kind of flavor of leadership
Kaiser Kuo:we, we have in China at any given time.
Kaiser Kuo:I don't know that it is a determining factor, but it's certainly one
Kaiser Kuo:that we should not ignore it 'cause it's there in the balance and it
Kaiser Kuo:weighs some, and that is, how China perceives its external environment.
Kaiser Kuo:And what, how it perceives this external environment often has to
Kaiser Kuo:do with the behavior of external players, especially the United States.
Kaiser Kuo:there's a fantastic paper that I would direct anyone toward.
Kaiser Kuo:I think it's from the winter quarter of 2023.
Kaiser Kuo:it's written by Thomas Fingar, F-I-N-G-A-R.
Kaiser Kuo:And David Lampton goes by Mike, Lampton, who is just one of the great scholars of,
Kaiser Kuo:China from Johns Hopkins se now emeritus.
Kaiser Kuo:But, they wrote a paper in Washington Quarterly that basically argued that, what
Kaiser Kuo:I'm saying right now, this is something I've thought for a very long time.
Kaiser Kuo:They just articulated it so well that China basically has these kind
Kaiser Kuo:of two modes that it toggles between one that really emphasizes national
Kaiser Kuo:security, and one that re really.
Kaiser Kuo:Emphasizes economic development.
Kaiser Kuo:And that, while there's always a shade between the two, that these
Kaiser Kuo:are the two basic modes, the basic, polls in this dyad, the one when it,
Kaiser Kuo:it does, emphasize national security.
Kaiser Kuo:It tends to be, again, more internally repressive, more externally aggressive.
Kaiser Kuo:it tends to, clamp down on descent, on, minority ethnicities
Kaiser Kuo:and, their activities.
Kaiser Kuo:it tends to be, more status, more nativist, a lot of these things
Kaiser Kuo:that I think a lot of us, certainly me, I don't necessarily we like
Kaiser Kuo:that other kind of China, right?
Kaiser Kuo:That kind, that emphasizes economic development and tends to be looser.
Kaiser Kuo:It tends to be more tolerant, more deliberative, a little more participatory.
Kaiser Kuo:It's not, it doesn't turn into a full-fledged,
Kaiser Kuo:electoral democracy.
Kaiser Kuo:Obviously.
Kaiser Kuo:It never has.
Kaiser Kuo:But it is governed more loosely, it's more collective in that mode.
Kaiser Kuo:and, this isn't just, I, think what's interesting is that this isn't, not,
Kaiser Kuo:I, again, we don't want to be totally essentialist here, but you could take
Kaiser Kuo:this story back into, quite early days in imperial times and look at dynastic
Kaiser Kuo:periods where China was tolerant and open and cosmopolitan and flourishing, where
Kaiser Kuo:the genders enjoyed relative equality and all this, and, it does correspond
Kaiser Kuo:to its sense of external threat.
Kaiser Kuo:So What they're suggesting is that, when China believes that it is in the
Kaiser Kuo:crosshairs, as it did really in, in the late, I think this is what people don't
Kaiser Kuo:understand is that, con contemporary with China's decision to become a
Kaiser Kuo:more, I mean it was a driving factor in this to become a, more centralized.
Kaiser Kuo:Polity to, to clamp down on some of the wayward,
Kaiser Kuo:Leaders during the collective era who had really ensconced themselves
Kaiser Kuo:in these powerful, they had interest groups and industries behind them.
Kaiser Kuo:They had these little fiefdoms, no more of that.
Kaiser Kuo:But part of the reason was, is because they perceived that to be a source of
Kaiser Kuo:vulnerability to foreign influence.
Kaiser Kuo:The big thing was of course, the internet.
Kaiser Kuo:in that, period after the great financial crisis, if you'll
Kaiser Kuo:recall, Jacob, let me think back.
Kaiser Kuo:you couldn't open.
Kaiser Kuo:The, to any op-ed section of any newspaper and not see in, editorial in America,
Kaiser Kuo:basically saying, yeah, to bring down authoritarian regimes, the world over,
Kaiser Kuo:all we need to do is open the internet.
Kaiser Kuo:So we were like merrily, appending the names of various American social
Kaiser Kuo:media products to all the leader color revolutions, Moldova in, 2009
Kaiser Kuo:and the Green Revolution in Tehran in, in, in 2009 after Akima de Nijad
Kaiser Kuo:reelection in, the, Arab Spring.
Kaiser Kuo:it was like the Twitter uprising, the YouTube revolution,
Kaiser Kuo:the Facebook revolution.
Kaiser Kuo:oh, China felt very, threatened by, this, it really felt like the external
Kaiser Kuo:environment had turned really hostile.
Kaiser Kuo:And we Americans tend not to think that or to believe it because, that was Obama.
Kaiser Kuo:George Bush was out of office at that George, h George W.
Kaiser Kuo:Bush was no longer in office.
Kaiser Kuo:The neo neoconservatives were gone.
Kaiser Kuo:And it was, China actually felt more threatened by what it called the
Kaiser Kuo:sort of liberal interventionists by these, interventionist talks.
Kaiser Kuo:people like Samantha Powers, who was the, the, UN.
Kaiser Kuo:Ambassador and Susan Rice, who's National Security advisor, and of course Hillary
Kaiser Kuo:Rod Clinton, who, they really believe was the arch interventionist, the real
Kaiser Kuo:architect of liberal interventionism.
Kaiser Kuo:And they were really threatened by this.
Kaiser Kuo:So I think that's, an important thing to understand about how China, so when
Kaiser Kuo:you, to get back to this question that you asked, where's China going to go?
Kaiser Kuo:It depends very much on what the United States does.
Kaiser Kuo:I, am somebody who really believes that if we want China to be the kind
Kaiser Kuo:of country we, would like it to be as Americans, that is, looser, more tolerant,
Kaiser Kuo:more open, more cosmopolitan, and more participatory, and more deliberative and
Kaiser Kuo:more plural, all those good things, then I think we can do more by doing less.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that, the, less we, fixate on China.
Kaiser Kuo:The more likely it is to let, its hackles down to, to let its guard
Kaiser Kuo:down and to, relax into a state that I think, we'd all be happier with.
Jacob Shapiro:It is an incredibly useful framework.
Jacob Shapiro:And it has so many different analogs.
Jacob Shapiro:when you think about, we were talking earlier about the United States
Jacob Shapiro:and its transformation until the US comes into the crosshairs of Japan,
Jacob Shapiro:there's really no US political will for a lot of the things that the
Jacob Shapiro:United States has done since then.
Jacob Shapiro:So to your point about, exogenous threats and how they change how governments and
Jacob Shapiro:how peoples consider their views in the world, I'm also, I forget who came up
Jacob Shapiro:with this, but, it's a recurring theme at, at different, Shabbat dinner tables when
Jacob Shapiro:I'm doing that, where you have Passover Jews and you have Purim Jews, and you
Jacob Shapiro:have Passover Jews who are thinking about universal themes of freedom and liberation
Jacob Shapiro:from slavery and everything else.
Jacob Shapiro:Then you have Purim Jews who are, they're out to kill us again.
Jacob Shapiro:And you can mark yourself on the spectrum for where you are in terms of
Jacob Shapiro:your attachment to Judaism, which is a very silly way of saying of course
Jacob Shapiro:these exogenous threats like affect how different states, are gonna go at it.
Jacob Shapiro:I gotta lay on the plane here 'cause we only have about eight to 10 minutes left.
Jacob Shapiro:And I wanna start a little bit meta, 'cause you asked me earlier, how much
Jacob Shapiro:I've been in China and the answer to that question is not a whole heck of a lot.
Jacob Shapiro:And it's caused, I don't, a fair amount of imposter syndrome for me to, to date you.
Jacob Shapiro:I came of age in the US educational system immediately after post nine 11.
Jacob Shapiro:So my linguistic training was Arabic.
Jacob Shapiro:My sense of the world was, hey, we need to understand the Middle East and this is the
Jacob Shapiro:great next thing for, the United States.
Jacob Shapiro:And I often wish I could go back in time and shift, some of those decisions.
Jacob Shapiro:I've become much more interested in China and I think I've,
Jacob Shapiro:read a lot of its history.
Jacob Shapiro:I've read a lot of its.
Jacob Shapiro:a lot of analysis on it, but I'm not Chinese.
Jacob Shapiro:I don't speak Chinese, I don't pretend to be any sort of China analyst.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm now somebody who works in investment and I have a sort of
Jacob Shapiro:globalist generalist perspective.
Jacob Shapiro:I don't have the luxury of focusing on one country, but I will say when I do focus
Jacob Shapiro:on one country, I, try to focus on China.
Jacob Shapiro:and I'm cognizant what a generalist perspective can teach you about China.
Jacob Shapiro:At the same time, at the same time that I'm cognizant of, there is so
Jacob Shapiro:much about China that someone like me will just never have access to.
Jacob Shapiro:And so to the extent that I'm going to be able to access it, I have to find
Jacob Shapiro:people like you who can explain it to me and integrate it into my worldview.
Jacob Shapiro:So I say all that to say.
Jacob Shapiro:The last question I wanted to ask you is different than anything else we've
Jacob Shapiro:talked about, because I can get a lot of the economics and the politics or at
Jacob Shapiro:least a good flavor of it from a lot of things, but I find the thing that I am.
Jacob Shapiro:I'm least capable of, wrapping my arms around.
Jacob Shapiro:And you've probably already felt it in some of the questions that I've asked
Jacob Shapiro:you is Chinese culture, and how Chinese culture and language are changing
Jacob Shapiro:both in China and around the world.
Jacob Shapiro:So the question I wanted to close on and just let you cook on, 'cause
Jacob Shapiro:you talked about how China and its conceptions of modernity and politics
Jacob Shapiro:and how that's changing the world.
Jacob Shapiro:I wanted to ask you if and how you think Chinese culture is changing the
Jacob Shapiro:world and give you free reign to whether you wanna talk about movies or art, or
Jacob Shapiro:music or whether it's about, science and technology, all these other things.
Jacob Shapiro:But to just to give you the platform and tell me if, I'm trying to think
Jacob Shapiro:about the cultural strength of China, the soft power of China in this
Jacob Shapiro:multipolar world that we're entering.
Jacob Shapiro:Where should I be focused and what should people be looking for, seeing that?
Kaiser Kuo:Yeah, I guess the first thing I would say is that don't
Kaiser Kuo:focus just on the developed west.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that you would get the wrong impression if all you looked
Kaiser Kuo:at was the cultural impact of the uptake of, cultural output.
Kaiser Kuo:In Western Europe and North America.
Kaiser Kuo:that, that wouldn't give you a very clear indication.
Kaiser Kuo:we're used to thinking of it in that way and we maybe can't be
Kaiser Kuo:blamed for it, but we would, we should, widen the lens and look at
Kaiser Kuo:China's impact in the global south.
Kaiser Kuo:Now that said, if we do just look at that narrowly, if we only limit
Kaiser Kuo:ourselves to looking at, Chinese cultural impact in the developed West food
Kaiser Kuo:aside, and, food's been here forever, there, there isn't a lot to point to.
Kaiser Kuo:There's not a lot of, films making, big box office in the United
Kaiser Kuo:States, even relative to say French film or things like that.
Kaiser Kuo:there's not a lot of, look, today we all use.
Kaiser Kuo:Consumer electronics that were made in China, but very
Kaiser Kuo:few of us know their names.
Kaiser Kuo:Whereas like when you were a kid, when I was, like a, college student and
Kaiser Kuo:buying all my consumer electronics to fit out my dorm room, they were all
Kaiser Kuo:Japanese and we could all just rattle off the names of all these Paul Loic
Kaiser Kuo:Japanese names, these brand names.
Kaiser Kuo:They were very good at that.
Kaiser Kuo:I keep thinking back to it.
Kaiser Kuo:I, again, again, I'm not a Marxist necessarily here, but I, think of
Kaiser Kuo:it in terms of a material framing.
Kaiser Kuo:I just did this thought experiment to myself.
Kaiser Kuo:I said, just Hey, I wonder when, like in, in the 1980s, I remember when suddenly all
Kaiser Kuo:we could talk about was a, AWA movies, and we all knew the names of all the Japanese
Kaiser Kuo:sushi fish, and suddenly you were an idiot if you didn't know what wasabi was.
Kaiser Kuo:And you, we all knew.
Kaiser Kuo:Suddenly we knew everything about, a lot of stuff.
Kaiser Kuo:We, we, There wasn't a ton of it back then, but the anime and the manga that,
Kaiser Kuo:that we were already aware of for sure.
Kaiser Kuo:Japan was cool.
Kaiser Kuo:What was the relative, per capita GDP of Japan to the United States.
Kaiser Kuo:Then it had crested it, by 85 or so at 75% of the United States DP and
Kaiser Kuo:I thought, wait, what about Korea?
Kaiser Kuo:When like, when we all were all knew Gangnam style and we were all
Kaiser Kuo:watching, winter sonata and, there was this, like this how do you phenomenon
Kaiser Kuo:that was sweeping over everyone was into, south Korean culture.
Kaiser Kuo:we, and then this is still before BTS and Squid game, but what was
Kaiser Kuo:the, Korean GDP as a percentage of, American GD capita and it was like 72%.
Kaiser Kuo:Then I think about China, it's still languishing at less than 25%.
Kaiser Kuo:Maybe that is, that, that's the, salient variable.
Kaiser Kuo:I think that's reflected in the part that, China right now, look, I lament the
Kaiser Kuo:fact, I work in culture in China, right?
Kaiser Kuo:I play in a rock band, and I hate that, that most people, I, don't meet
Kaiser Kuo:a lot of Chinese people who did what I did when I was in college, which
Kaiser Kuo:is, like I blow a bong hit and sit down, with the speakers like right
Kaiser Kuo:next to my ears and listen in rapture to the dark side of the moon, right?
Kaiser Kuo:music had this transformative power for me.
Kaiser Kuo:Or I would get so into film, I would like, you don't see that
Kaiser Kuo:really happening that much in China.
Kaiser Kuo:It's not a mainstream thing.
Kaiser Kuo:It's not like every college student.
Kaiser Kuo:They don't, have these, musical subcultures that lead their whole
Kaiser Kuo:ideology the way that we, did.
Kaiser Kuo:I, think that a lot of it is just because, we're at this stage right now
Kaiser Kuo:where most people are just I'm gonna keep my nose to the grindstone and
Kaiser Kuo:work really hard and save up money.
Kaiser Kuo:And music, insofar as it's important at all, is wallpaper, it's window dressing.
Kaiser Kuo:It's, it's entertainment, it's not art.
Kaiser Kuo:So we haven't reached that phase yet.
Kaiser Kuo:it's not, we haven't there, it's in pockets.
Kaiser Kuo:We have in China, in, in small pockets, but it's not mainstream yet.
Kaiser Kuo:And only when that happens, I think, will, China then start to export.
Kaiser Kuo:The other thing is, you know, there's a cultural divergence, right?
Kaiser Kuo:China has a big enough.
Kaiser Kuo:Domestic market so that its cultural product is still going to be mainly
Kaiser Kuo:created for a Chinese market, which has markedly different tastes than the West.
Kaiser Kuo:You look at the Chinese films that have hit in recent years, none of
Kaiser Kuo:them are intelligible outside of a western, out of a Chinese milieu.
Kaiser Kuo:The, the whole aesthetic divergence that's happened in the last couple of decades.
Kaiser Kuo:It's just, it's, incredible.
Kaiser Kuo:They're not, the filmmakers no longer are thinking about those festival
Kaiser Kuo:audiences in Rotterdam or Toronto or,
Kaiser Kuo:whatever, Sundance, right?
Kaiser Kuo:it's no longer that.
Kaiser Kuo:yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:No, it's, well said.
Jacob Shapiro:there's a reason, blade Runner.
Jacob Shapiro:it's Japanese that's in, in Blade Runner, it's not really That's right.
Jacob Shapiro:A Chinese cultural influence.
Jacob Shapiro:That, is in it.
Jacob Shapiro:alright.
Jacob Shapiro:Kaiser, thank you for taking the time.
Jacob Shapiro:you, that was
Kaiser Kuo:a lot of fun, man.
Kaiser Kuo:You ask fantastically good questions.
Jacob Shapiro:I try.
Jacob Shapiro:I try, I'm, particularly excited about this episode because you're someone,
Jacob Shapiro:that I want to be in dialogue with.
Jacob Shapiro:Yeah.
Jacob Shapiro:I think you have access, to a portion of information that I think is
Jacob Shapiro:absolutely critical for what people like me are doing in the world.
Jacob Shapiro:But I don't think enough of us are actually listening and talking to you.
Jacob Shapiro:So I try and talk you up all the time and I'm, really grateful for
Jacob Shapiro:you, taking some time and coming up
Kaiser Kuo:right back at you, man.
Kaiser Kuo:Thank you.
Kaiser Kuo:I look forward to this.