SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : The Financial Collapse of 2001 Unwinding -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (7873)9/5/2021 1:10:05 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13777
 
Canadians are about to remove Trudeau. When Kiwis will remove Jacinda ?

Oh that is what a Canadian pissed look like!
I didn't know that.




To: Maurice Winn who wrote (7873)9/12/2021 4:32:31 AM
From: elmatador1 Recommendation

Recommended By
DinoNavarre

  Respond to of 13777
 
Recap:
CAPEX Collapse 2010 - 2016 was tough to navigate

Then a double whammy. Trump changes in taxation sucked money into the stock market as companies engaged on stock buy back.
2017 - 2019

Then, the icing on the cake, the Covid thing.
2020 - on going
But I saw things improving already by end 2019 beginning of 2020 as CAPEX were going up to recover from the CAPEX Collapse.

Meanwhile there is the friction US - China Economic War.

Each one observing the other. Me I am observing this:
China is going to be saddle with million of elderly folks
China expected to have 300 million senior residents in five years
The Ministry of Civil Affairs released a report on Friday which said that by the end of 2019, 12.57 percent of China's population was aged 65 or above. That demographic will reach 300 million during the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-25) and the government will issue specific policies to tackle the challenges.
https://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1204581.shtml


That means China will not be building too many fighter jets and warships. The profile of the economy will change.
In 2030 we will have a different China.

THE RETURN OF THE POLE CLIMBER

The Chinese pulled out of the emerging markets ´



so there are different types of financing being thought to fill the vacuum
Private capital.
That means governments need to step up the ante to have infrastructure built.

That is not only energy. Telecoms is the same. China is vanishing from the merging markets and returning home.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (7873)9/13/2021 5:47:02 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13777
 
Why ‘peak humanity’ is nearer than you think

Simon Kuestenmacher

Let’s step away from our focus on the here and now and answer a delightfully big question.

When will we reach peak humanity?

When will planet Earth see the maximum of human inhabitants? What will this mean for Australia?

The question is obviously an important one. Our penchant for growth might well stem from the seemingly never-ending increase of the human population. If there are more of us, we need more resources, more space, more of everything.

Whether the global population grows, or declines depends on how many babies are born and how many people die every year.

Even though our global population continues to grow older as better healthcare and fewer wars increase the average life expectancy, the total number of annual deaths will only continue to rise on an ageing planet.

While we would have expected around 59 million global deaths for 2020, COVID-19 drove this number up by at least three million, according to the World Health Organisation.

Declining fertility
How many babies are born every year is linked to a single number, the total fertility rate. That figure describes the average number of children born to a woman in her lifetime. If the global fertility rate is below the replacement level of 2.1, global population shrinks.

The reason the replacement rate isn’t 2.0 children is that we need to account for infant and child mortality as well as gender imbalances.

Conventional wisdom long suggested that we humans will continue to grow our population until we create famines and create suffering at unimaginable scales.

Good news! That’s not what current demographic projections think the world will look like.

I am showing the two most well-known global population forecasts in this chart. The UN Population Division’s ‘Median Variant’ is by far the most quoted population projection. It assumes that we reach peak humanity at just under 11 billion around the year 2100. That suggests we need to feed, house, and educate an additional three billion people.

In 80 years, we face the challenge of a declining global population, a world of abandoned villages, stagnating megacities, and bustling metropolises.

The ‘Median Variant’ is just one of several scenarios published by the UN. Their low-ball estimate has the world top out at 10 billion by 2080 and their extreme scenario has the world reach its population peak at 12.7 billion by 2100.

Fewer warm bodies?
These days more and more demographers disagree with the UN’s population projections.

The Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital at the University of Vienna produces the second-most-quoted set of global population forecasts.

According to the Austrians, we will reach peak humanity by 2070 at only 9.4 billion.

An increasing number of researchers find even the Wittgenstein predictions to be too high. The Lancet recently published a piece suggesting we will see a population peak of under 10 billion as soon as the mid-2060s.

If you are under 40, there is a fair chance you’ll see peak humanity in your lifetime.

Considering we have finite resources on this planet, it comes as a relief to hear that we’ll have fewer mouths to feed. To understand the challenges a shrinking population brings, we can look at Japan today or at China in five years.

Japan reached its peak of 128 million people a decade ago and has been slowly shrinking ever since. Japan was very lucky to have become wealthy before the population started ageing and retiring at high rates.

To counter the double-whammy of ageing and shrinking, Japan invested heavily into robotics and automation, changed its social contract to encourage women to remain in the workforce after marriage, and even changed its longstanding restrictive migration policies – Japan is now home to over two million migrants.

China will face similar challenges to Japan but at a much higher rate. In about five to eight years, China will peak at just under 1.5 billion people, before starting to shrink at a rate of about five million people per year.

ELMAT: Japan will graciously return to its natural size. Europe China and ultimately the US will follow.

The problem for China is that it won’t be as rich as Japan was when it started shrinking, and hundreds of millions of elderly Chinese face a poverty-stricken retirement.

This Chinese demographic cliff is the reason why the nation’s leaders will do anything to keep GDP growth high – it won’t be enough, though, to counter the demographic forces.

The one-child-policy will haunt China. Nations like China will have to burden their young with high taxes and lower living standards to finance an ever-aging society.

ELMAT: Tell TJ, there won't be money for whizzbang technology, nor jet fighter neither aircraftcarriers
Young Chinese will therefore increasingly look to move abroad, will seek out younger, more agile nations where their economic security can be guaranteed.

Fighting for talent
An ageing and shrinking planet will lead to a large population reshuffle. We will see the international war for talent increase. Countries that manage to remain young by importing workers in their 20s and 30s will be the winners.

Retirement planning will become increasingly important. Superannuation schemes, where every worker owns their own retirement bucket, will become more common across the globe.

Demographically speaking, Australia is well positioned to succeed in a shrinking and ageing world. We have plenty of room to accommodate more young people to soften the effects of an ageing population, and we already have a decent national retirement scheme in place (which will need to be tweaked to work for the poorest quarter of the country as well).

In that scenario Australia will grow even when the planet is shrinking. We will become much more culturally diverse and this suggests we must be much more proactive in helping our new arrivals to assimilate.

On the other hand, we might also need to become more selective and set stringent language requirements to ensure all residents have a common language.

We also will need to be realistic about just how big the coming population growth is likely to be and plan accordingly. In the past two decades we failed to grow infrastructure and social programs at the same rate as we grew our population.

We’d be fools to repeat the same mistakes.

Demographer Simon Kuestenmacher is a co-founder of The Demographics Group. His columns, media commentary and public speaking focus on current socio-demographic trends and how these impact Australia. Follow Simon on Twitter or LinkedIn for daily data insights.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (7873)9/24/2021 11:10:28 AM
From: Cogito Ergo Sum  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 13777
 
:) Headline made me instantly think of you

I went back to the earliest reports of Covid and they said it was a slow mutating virus. That changed.

To: Pogeu Mahone who wrote (178837)9/24/2021 8:47:37 AM
From: Julius Wong of 178842
Beer, chicken and now carbon dioxide: Why Britain’s shortages keep coming

washingtonpost.com


Have fun with it :)

It's Jack, Blackie, Kastelco.... etc etc



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (7873)10/9/2021 5:44:08 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13777
 
The best way to win a Nobel is to get nominated by another laureate

An Ashkenazi nominates another Ashkenazi and pretty soon the % of Ashkenazi nobel laureates go up...

economist.com



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (7873)10/10/2021 1:53:18 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13777
 
Production peaked 2000. Then shutdown 70% of the storage facilities in 2017? After production is at its lowest?
Following the natural gas/energy crisis of the UK, MQ.

The Rough storage facility, owned by Centrica, the parent company of British Gas, provided 70% of the UK gas storage capacity for more than 30 years before it shut in 2017 following a government decision not to subsidise the costly maintenance and upgrades needed to keep the site going.





To: Maurice Winn who wrote (7873)10/10/2021 2:06:45 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13777
 
The UK was going to join the third world on the 70s. North Sea oil&gas saved and they prospered.

Now BREXIT shows signs that oil&gas ending UK will return to its path to join the no longer third world but emerging markets.




To: Maurice Winn who wrote (7873)10/16/2021 4:30:13 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13777
 
Fitch has slashed its projections for labour supply growth over 2019 to 2026 due to the pandemic-related shock to immigration flow.

Australia’s rapid headline GDP growth relative to other large developed markets prior to the pandemic were in large part fuelled by strong inward migration.

This hid a steady deterioration of underlying productivity growth, an area in which Australia has done poorly compared with many other developed markets.

fitchratings.com

Covid display the hidden truths:

One of them. Economic growth tied to immigration.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (7873)9/6/2023 1:45:58 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13777
 
Economic genius. Looks like the world followed your advice.

Your solution causes inflation.

Why. Because if someone produces at a higher costs, that cost has to be recouped from the customers.

And they will end up not affording it