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Currently, there are four major transformations that are shaping
political, economic and world events. These transformations have
profound implications for American business leaders and owners, our
culture and on our way of life.
1.
The War in Iraq
There are
three major monotheistic religions in the world: Christianity,
Judaism and Islam.
In the 16th
century, Judaism and Christianity reconciled with the modern world.
The rabbis, priests and scholars found a way to settle up and pave
the way forward. Religion remained at the center of life, church
and state became separate. Rule of law, the idea of economic
liberty, individual rights, human rights - all these are defining
points of modern Western civilization. These concepts started with
the Greeks but didn't take off until the 15th and 16th century when
Judaism and Christianity found a way to reconcile with the modern
world. When that happened, it unleashed the scientific revolution
and the greatest outpouring of art, literature and music the world
has ever known.
Islam, which
developed in the 7th century, counts millions of Moslems around the
world who are normal people. However, there is a radical streak
within Islam. When the radicals are in charge, Islam attacks
Western civilization. Islam first attacked Western civilization in
the 7th century, and later in the 16th and 17th centuries. By 1683,
the Moslems (Turks from the Ottoman Empire) were literally at the
gates of Vienna. It was in Vienna that the climatic battle between
Islam and Western civilization took place. The West won and went
forward. Islam lost and went backward.
Interestingly, the date of that battle was September 11. Since
them, Islam has not found a way to reconcile with the modern world.
Today,
terrorism is the third attack on Western civilization by radical
Islam. To deal with terrorism, the U.S. is doing two things.
First, units of our armed forces are in 30 countries around the
world hunting down terrorist groups and dealing with them. This
gets very little publicity. Second we are taking military action in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
These
actions are covered relentlessly by the media. People can argue
about whether the war in Iraq is right or wrong. However, the
underlying strategy behind the war is to use our military to remove
the radicals from power and give the moderates a chance. Our hope
is that, over time, the moderates will find a way to bring Islam
forward into the 21st century. That's what our involvement in Iraq
and Afghanistan is all about.
The lesson
of 9/11 is that we live in a world where a small number of people
can kill a large number of people very quickly. They can use
airplanes, bombs, anthrax, chemical weapons or dirty bombs. Even
with a first-rate intelligence service (which the U.S. does not
have), you can't stop every attack. That means our tolerance for
political horseplay has dropped to zero. No longer will we play
games with terrorists or weapons of mass destructions.
Most of the
instability and horseplay is coming from the Middle East.
That's why
we have thought that if we could knock out the radicals and give the
moderates a chance to hold power; they might find a way to reconcile
Islam with the modern world. So when looking at Afghanistan or
Iraq, it's important to look for any signs that they are
modernizing.
For example:
women being brought into the work force and colleges in Afghanistan
is good. The Iraqis stumbling toward a constitution is good.
People can
argue about what the U.S. is doing and how we're doing it, but
anything that suggests Islam is finding its way forward is good.
2. The
Emergence of China
In the last
20 years, China has moved 250 million people from the farms and
villages into the cities. Their plan is to move another 300 million
in the next 20 years. When you put that many people into the
cities, you have to find work for them. That's why China is
addicted to manufacturing; they have to put all the relocated people
to work. When we decide to manufacture something in the U.S., it's
based on market needs and the opportunity to make a profit. In
China, they make the decision because they want the jobs, which is a
very different calculation.
While China
is addicted to manufacturing, Americans are addicted to low prices.
As a result, a unique kind of economic codependency has developed
between the two countries. If we ever stop buying from China, they
will explode politically. If China stops selling to us, our economy
will take a huge hit because prices will jump. We are subsidizing
their economic development; they are subsidizing our economic
growth.
Because of
their huge growth in manufacturing, China is hungry for raw
materials, which drives prices up worldwide. China is also thirsty
for oil, which is one reason oil is now at $100 a barrel. By 2020,
China will produce more cars than the U.S. China is also buying its
way into the oil infrastructure around the world. They are doing it
in the open market and paying fair market prices, but millions of
barrels of oil that would have gone to the U.S. are now going to
China. China's quest to assure it has the oil it needs to fuel its
economy is a major factor in world politics and economics.
We have our
Navy fleets protecting the sea lines, specifically the ability to
get the tankers through. It won't be long before the Chinese have
an aircraft carrier sitting in the Persian Gulf as well. The
question is, will their aircraft carrier be pointing in the same
direction as ours or against us?
3.
Shifting Demographics of Western Civilization
Most
countries in the Western world have stopped breeding. For a
civilization obsessed with sex, this is remarkable. Maintaining a
steady population requires a birth rate of 2.1. In Western Europe,
the birth rate currently stands at 1.5, or 30 percent below
replacement. In 30 years there will be 70 to 80 million fewer
Europeans than there are today. The current birth rate in Germany
is 1.3. Italy and Spain are even lower at 1.2. At that rate, the
working age population declines by 30 percent in 20 years, which has
a huge impact on the economy. When you don't have young workers to
replace the older ones, you have to import them.
The
European countries are currently importing Moslems. Today, the
Moslems comprise 10 percent of France and Germany, and the
percentage is rising rapidly because they have higher birthrates.
However, the Moslem populations are not being integrated into the
cultures of their host countries, which is a political catastrophe.
One reason Germany and France don't support the Iraq war is they
fear their Moslem populations will explode on them. By 2020, more
than half of all births in the Netherlands will be non-European.
The huge
design flaw in the postmodern secular state is that you need a
traditional religious society birth rate to sustain it. The
Europeans simply don't wish to have children, so they are dying. In
Japan, the birthrate is 1.3. As a result, Japan will lose up to 60
million people over the next 30 years. Because Japan has a very
different society than Europe, they refuse to import workers.
Instead, they are just shutting down. Japan has already closed
2,000 schools, and is closing them down at the rate of 300 per
year. Japan is also aging very rapidly. By 2020, one out of every
five Japanese will be at least 70 years old. Nobody has any idea
about how to run an economy with those demographics.
Europe
and Japan, which comprise two of the world's major economic engines,
aren't merely in recession, they're shutting down. This will have a
huge impact on the world economy, and it is already beginning to
happen. Why are the birthrates so low? There is a direct
correlation between abandonment of traditional religious society and
a drop in birth rate, and Christianity in Europe is becoming
irrelevant.
The
second reason is economic. When the birth rate drops below
replacement, the population ages. With fewer working people to
support more retired people, it puts a crushing tax burden on the
smaller group of working age people. As a result, young people
delay marriage and having a family. Once this trend starts, the
downward spiral only gets worse. These countries have abandoned all
the traditions they formerly held in regard to having families and
raising children.
The U.S.
birth rate is 2.0, just below replacement. We have an increase in
population because of immigration. When broken down by ethnicity,
the Anglo birth rate is 1.6 (same as France) while the Hispanic
birth rate is 2.7. In the U.S., the baby boomers are starting to
retire in massive numbers. This will push the elder dependency ratio
from 19 to 38 over the next 10 to 15 years. This is not as bad as
Europe, but still represents the same kind of trend.
Western
civilization seems to have forgotten what every primitive society
understands - you need kids to have a healthy society. Children are
huge consumers. Then they grow up to become taxpayers. That's how
a society works, but the postmodern secular state seems to have
forgotten that. If U.S. birth rates of the past 20 to 30 years had
been the same as post-World War II, there would be no Social
Security or Medicare problems.
The
world's most effective birth control device is money. As society
creates a middle class and women move into the workforce, birth
rates drop. Having large families is incompatible with middle class
living.
The
quickest way to drop the birth rate is through rapid economic
development. After World War II, the U.S. instituted a $600 tax
credit per child. The idea was to enable mom and dad to have four
children without being troubled by taxes. This led to a baby boom
of 22 million kids, which was a huge consumer market. That turned
into a huge tax base. However, to match that incentive in today's
dollars would cost $12,000 per child.
China and
India do not have declining populations. However, in both
countries, there is a preference for boys over girls, and we now
have the technology to know which is which before they are born. In
China and India, families are aborting the girls. As a result, in
each of these countries there are 70 million boys growing up who
will never find wives. When left alone, nature produces 103 boys
for every 100 girls. In some provinces, however, the ratio is 128
boys to every 100 girls.
The birth
rate in Russia is so low that by 2050 their population will be
smaller than that of Yemen. Russia has one-sixth of the earth's land
surface and much of its oil. You can't control that much area with
such a small population. Immediately to the south, you have China
with 70 million unmarried men who are a real potential nightmare
scenario for Russia.
4.
Restructuring of American Business
The fourth
major transformation involves a fundamental restructuring of
American business. Today's business environment is very complex and
competitive. To succeed, you have to be the best, which means
having the highest quality and lowest cost. Whatever your price
point, you must have the best quality and lowest price. To be the
best, you have to concentrate on one thing. You can't be all things
to all people and be the best.
A generation
ago, IBM used to make every part of their computer. Now Intel makes
the chips, Microsoft makes the software, and someone else makes the
modems, hard drives, monitors, etc. IBM even out-sources their call
center. Because IBM has all these companies supplying goods and
services cheaper and better than they could do it themselves, they
can make a better computer at a lower cost. This is called a
fracturing of business. When one company can make a better product
by relying on others to perform functions the business it used to do
itself, it creates a complex pyramid of companies that serve and
support each other.
This
fracturing of American business is now in its second generation.
The
companies who supply IBM are now doing the same thing - outsourcing
many of their core services and production process. As a result,
they can make cheaper, better products. Over time, this pyramid
continues to get bigger and bigger. Just when you think it can't
fracture again, it does.
Even very
small businesses can have a large pyramid of corporate entities that
perform many of its important functions. One aspect of this trend
is that companies end up with fewer employees and more independent
contractors. This trend has also created two new words in business,
integrator and complementor. At the top of the pyramid, IBM is the
integrator. As you go down the pyramid, Microsoft, Intel and the
other companies that support IBM are the complementors. However,
each of the complementors is itself an integrator for the
complementors underneath it.
This has
several implications, the first of which is that we are now getting
false readings on the economy. People who used to be employees are
now independent contractors launching their own businesses. There
are many people working whose work is not listed as a job. As a
result, the economy is perking along better than the numbers are
telling us.
Outsourcing
also confused the numbers. Suppose a company like General Motors
decides to outsource all its employee cafeteria functions to
Marriott (which it did). It lays-off hundreds of cafeteria
workers, who then get hired right back by Marriott. The only thing
that has changed is that these people work for Marriott rather than
GM. Yet, the media headlines will scream that America has lost more
manufacturing jobs.
All that
really happened is that these workers are now reclassified as
service workers. So the old way of counting jobs contributes to
false economic readings. As yet, we haven't figured out how to make
the numbers catch up with the changing realities of the business
world.
Another
implication of this massive restructuring is that because companies
are getting rid of units and people that used to work for them, the
entity is smaller. As the companies get smaller and more efficient,
revenues are going down but profits are going up. As a result, the
old notion that revenues are up and we're doing great isn't always
the case anymore. Companies are getting smaller but are becoming
more efficient and profitable in the process.
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