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Jan Wiklund's avatar

Concerning point three - I really doubt that western middle class people bother about if Chinese or Indian people live as good as they do themselves; they never meet them and can't judge. Well, they see Chinese tourists as they saw Japanese tourists 50 years ago, but why should they be angry about that? What bother them is the attrition of their own living standards compared to the 1 or max 10 %.

This is of course more burning in the US than in Europe. But even in Europe middle class people begin experience family members having to take zero-hours jobs or having no jobs at all. What we see in the western world was described excellently by Peter Turchin and Jack Goldstone (https://www.noemamag.com/welcome-to-the-turbulent-twenties/):

"First, faced with a surge of labor that dampens growth in wages and productivity, elites seek to take a larger portion of economic gains for themselves, driving up inequality.

Second, facing greater competition for elite wealth and status, they tighten up the path to mobility to favor themselves and their progeny. For example, in an increasingly meritocratic society, elites could keep places at top universities limited and raise the entry requirements and costs in ways that favor the children of those who had already succeeded.

Third, anxious to hold on to their rising fortunes, they do all they can to resist taxation of their wealth and profits, even if that means starving the government of needed revenues, leading to decaying infrastructure, declining public services and fast-rising government debts."

And that makes middle class people feel very uneasy.

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April Harding's avatar

Very interesting theses you have nailed to the "door" here ;-)

Some reflections.

Re. Third, the West. I think the feelings of insecurity and displacement are driven more by members of Western "middle classes" comparing themselves to LOCAL benchmarks rather than to Asian populations. In particular - how they are doing compared to their parents' generation in their own communities, and maybe how they are doing compared to whatever "elites" they are familiar with.

Re. Eighth, climate change. It is important to add that the climate change agenda is driving international organizations to take up energy policies and programs that are detrimental to people in poor countries e.g. banning public financing for fossil fuel projects https://twitter.com/toddjmoss/status/1589425188390989824?s=20

and even blocking the development of nuclear energy sources

https://toddmoss.substack.com/p/tyranny-of-the-anti-nuclear-minority

- policies which slow their growth and which slow the rate at which citizens of poor countries will get access to reliable energy.

Re. Ninth financialization and amorality. Besides financialization, I think that other aspects of globalization processes contribute to the destruction of cohesion and social bonds, including: sustained, relatively high rates of immigration, esp immigration involving people with relatively high cultural "distance" from the host population [I suppose Robert Putnam's 2007 paper is the best reference for this point], and highly "liberal" trade regimes, enabling company size to grow and encouraging executives to identify less with their local community, or their homeland and thereby to relieve any pressure to behave in a pro-social fashion that might otherwise come from these social connections.

Re. Tenth, migration. Speaking of the US, I don't think it is accurate to characterize recent migration levels as "minimal". I guess it depends on what your measure is and what your comparator is.

I would argue that, when thinking about the impact on society, the share of the foreign-born in the population is a useful measure. If you compare the foreign-born share of the US population at different points in time, the share was 14.6 percent in September of 2022. This is triple the share in 1970 and nearly double the share in 1990. If you compare this share to that during the entire history of the US, the foreign-born share is now reaching the all-time highs reached in 1910. https://cis.org/Report/ForeignBorn-Population-Hits-Nearly-48-Million-September-2022

Re. Eleventh. What is to be done? I share your skepticism!

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