AT every seminar on financial matters these days, there’s one question that
lingers — even during the coffee breaks: will the economy recover, and when?
And, it isn’t about the Indian economy but that of the US. I reiterate it
will take at least 40 quarters — that’s a decade — for America to recover. I
tell this, and am shunned — like a swine flu patient.

I still maintain the US is going the banana republic way what with a
national debt of more than $10 trillion, which is more than 80 per cent of
its national income. Not only that the budget deficit is skyrocketing; it’s
expected to reach more than 10 per cent soon. Last year, the US financial
regulatory agencies came up with plans of financial support worth $6.8
trillion — comprising temporary loans and liability and asset guarantees.
And by the third end of the first quarter of 2009, the financial support
programmes reached $13.9 trillion.

The federal deficit as percentage of GDP is now expected to reach more than
10 per cent. There will be furious printing of more treasury bills and
notes. The expected inflation is going to rip apart the society and the
largest selling item in the last quarter was handguns and rifles. Already
intriguing reports have come about attempt to smuggle more than $134 billion
in treasury bonds by two Japanese citizens through the Italian border into
Switzerland. It could be a ploy by CIA or really a daredevil act by some
foreign government to destabilise the global financial system. I am waiting
for the creditrating agencies like S&P to downgrade the US economy like
other developing countries and prove their independence from the sole
superpower. High hopes. Angus Maddison in his pioneering work for OECD on
the global GDP share for the last 2,000 years has brought out an interesting
fact pertaining to India and China. As early as the 1820s, China (33%) along
with India (16%) and other Asian countries had a share of more than 55 per
cent in the global GDP. By the late 20th century, it has declined to 29 per
cent. The China percentage slid to 12, India’s to 5.

In the next 20 years, India should plan to have a share of at least 30 per
cent of the global GDP. These imply that India should be racing ahead. If
India grows at 8 to 9 per cent in the coming decade, then it can become the
world’s third or fourth superpower.

But it also implies that, parallely, the West should decline in terms of
their importance in the share of global GDP and world affairs.

Since the total is 100 per cent, any increased share for India and China
would automatically reduce that of the other two.

Unlike the Great Depression of the 1920s, the current crisis for the West is
not just an economic crisis. It has a dimension of demography and conflict
(ongoing war with radical Islam) to it. Demographic, because Europe is
slowly fading away from the global map. It used to have more than 20 per
cent of the global population during the First World War, and now has less
than 11 per cent. What’s more, it’s expected to shrink to three per cent in
as many decades.

The reproductive rate in many European countries is less than 1.5, whereas
the stable one is 2.1. In the case of US, the crisis is more severe due to
its declining savings rate and a long-term tendency to nationalise families
and privatise government.

Social security and Medicare system in US is classic case of nationalising
families.

Such a declining Empire is dangerous to deal with. To start with, it does
not want to accept the fact that it is a declining Empire.

Plus, it wants to retain its sole power status when it realises that its
writ does not any more hold good. It tries to bully India.

Whenever a US official visits India, the beards in J&K become more active.
Remember Robin Raphael of the nineties vintage who propped up the Hurriyat
Conference? India recalls with anger the role Robin Raphael played during
the Presidency of Bill Clinton in encouraging the formation of Hurriyat
Conference, the umbrella organisation of moderate terrorists and terrorised
moderates. Her only name to fame was she studied together with Clinton. When
Hillary comes to India, the level of violence in J&K will increase. I wish
someone in foreign office in India plots the correlation between visits of
US officials and mob frenzy in the downtown Srinagar.

The declining empire realises that its elbowroom is becoming lesser and
lesser with the Pakistan army that owns and controls a country. Islamabad
always has a peculiar way of coming to discussion on any issue.

They keep a gun on their own head and argue with others. That is, they
always threaten others with catastrophe if money is not given to them. This
is the most sophisticated begging anywhere you can see in international
relations. Bribing them won’t stop the plotters against the “US Satan”.

The next thing the declining empire does is to cringe and appease. The
speech by Obama in Cairo is of that variety. He ascribed every human
scientific endeavor to Islamic civilisation. Forget the Hindus who invented
zero, forget Ptolemy and forget Copernicus. Just rewrite history. The third
thing a declining power does is to pressure others to sacrifice on its
behalf to buy peace with bullies. It cannot deal with radical Islam and if
the ISI (that is what is critical — not the ten per cent Zardari) needs to
be appeased with a piece of J&K, then the US will try to arm-twist India.

Herein comes our ability to understand declining powers.

We must internalise that US is a declining power and our bureaucrats must
chant it hundred eight times on a daily basis. We should also remember that
USA is very uncomfortable in dealing with democracies.

It’s natural ally is always a dictatorship since they can be “use and throw”
friendships.

Dealing with democracies is messy since they talk about a domestic
constituency and behave similar to USA. A mirror image of itself is
unacceptable to “sole super power”. As India continues to grow at more than
8 per cent — and simply due to the power of compounding emerges as a major
power — the desperation of the declining power will be more since our
terrorist neighbour who has a the largest begging bowl and highest
per-capita AK-47s will blackmail the declining power to appease him to keep
peace.

What is in Indian interest is the continuation of civil war in Pakistan for,
say, another ten to twenty years — ambient conflict — sort of
auto-cannibalism which will be a dynamic disequilibria — situation.

Other option is to have at least three or so states created out of that
entity. The concept of stable Pakistan is passé and a mirage and that should
be unequivocally communicated to the declining empire.

Remember the last century. The declining British Empire — now it is the sick
child of Europe but still with a grand illusion of influencing Indian
sub-continent — created havoc by partitioning the land. The current
declining empire may be tempted to do something rash to protect itself. And
therein lays the challenge for our political leadership and mandarins.
Dealing with a declining empire is more difficult than dealing with a stable
empire.
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