Westernization
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Balaji· 2025-11-07 09:34
Macroeconomic Trends & Geopolitical Shifts - The period from 1950-1990 is identified as an atypical era of Westernization and centralization [1] - The global economy's center of mass is shifting back to Eurasia, leading to a decline in the West's relative strength [2] - The West's living standards are heavily reliant on its continued absolute dominance, supported by the US dollar's status as the global reserve currency [3] - A decline from the undisputed 1 position could contract the tax base for dollar inflation from 1-3 billion globally to approximately 300 million Americans, potentially causing a 60-90% drop and increasing inflation [4] - Market participants are observed selling Western bonds and investing in Chinese bonds, gold, internet stocks, and internet currencies [7] - The 20th-century Western economy is being superseded by China and the Internet [7] Sovereign Debt & Financial Instability - Issues are shared across the entire G7, with France and the UK potentially requiring IMF bailouts [6] - Soaring yields are observed across the US, France, UK, Italy, Germany, and Japan, while Chinese yields are falling [6] - Western governments are perceived as bankrupt [8]