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Geoffrey G's avatar

I know it's not a fair request, but if everyone agrees that Europe can't keep doing X and Y, what are they actually supposed to do instead? Description is easier than prescription, not the least when it comes to prescribing innovation, economic growth, or social dynamism.

And, not to be overly pessimistic, but maybe the Europeans just don't have much agency to change pretty structural impediments?

1/ Europe doesn't have the demographics to achieve China-style growth or to reclaim its Wirtschaftswunder Postwar Miracles (Almost nobody does, anymore, including and especially China now!)

2/ Europe has a dearth of indigenous energy resources. It doesn't have sufficient oil and natural gas. It doesn't even have the same potential for renewables that the United States has. A place like Texas, meanwhile, has both! This is a HUGE problem for Europe's industrial competitiveness when it can't or won't access Russian energy exports. East Asian countries also struggle with a lack of indigenous energy supply, of course, but they have no compunctions about importing Russian energy and burning heaps of coal. Neither renewables, nextgen nuclear power, or even a bumper crop of LNG supply will resolve this in time. By the 2030s, Europe will have already been de-industrialized by high energy prices and Chinese competition... permanently.

3/ Europe is much more difficult to defend than the United States or even China, for purely geographic reasons. Even to have "table stakes" of just basic security against invasion from Russia, it has to do more. It's unclear that even if every European NATO member actually spent 4%+ of GDP on its military whether it would be able to reliably deter Russian aggression. The Russians are getting much more ROI for their investment in military power, have a much larger population in one country, and have a much higher tolerance for casualties and privation. But just being able to deter Russia isn't enough to be "great." That's far from the kind of power-projection capability that Europe had historically during the Age of Discovery and colonial eras. Without the latter, it's not going to be a power that "shapes history."

4/ It's no coincidence that the spoils of the latest consumer tech waves have settled almost entirely in the laps of the Chinese and the Americans. No other country has the scale of domestic market to groom a Silicon Valley. Europe could never do this. But, then again, neither could even the rest of Developed Asia or other Western countries like Canada or Australia. This isn't just a Europe problem. It's winner-take-all for the two economic superpowers.

5/ Europe is a victim of diversity. No matter how much integration the EU is able to muster (and the political appetite for more of that is zero), you still have 27 sovereign states with as many languages, cultures, regulatory systems, and manifold barriers to entry for multinational businesses and multilateral policy efforts, alike. Every one a veto point, too. And where are the actual "Europeans?" Single-digit percentages of Europeans actually take advantage of their the most transformative of their EU Four Freedoms: the Freedom of Movement. Most stay home. Imagine if the United States had historically been so immobile! And consider that one of the primary engines of China's economic rise was rural-to-urban migration. When Europeans do manage to move in any noticeable numbers, it causes backlash, as we saw with Brexit.

So, could and should Europe do more to shake itself from fatalism and geopolitical suicide? Yes! But it's not helpful to be delusional about what's actually possible. Europe will almost certainly never be the peer of the Chinese or the Americans on these measures in the coming decades.

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James Mills's avatar

I can see why some of these items might be upsetting to the European elites. Perhaps they should look to their own backyards, though. There's very little that the United States could do to Europe which would be worse than the effects of millions of unassimilated, violent, and unproductive immigrants. THAT should be their primary concern.

https://jmpolemic.substack.com/p/case-study-elite-capture

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