Sure, but until then, proportional to each of [population, education/educated workers, capital, instantaneous industrial base, energy supply].
Asia's diverse, but I'd say they seem to be doing pretty well with rapid improvements across all fronts.
In comparison, the US's weaker (not weak-weak, just weaker) areas currently seem to be educated workers, instantaneous industrial base, and energy supply (relative to rapidly growing demand from compute); while the EU's weaker areas currently seem to be capital and energy supply (from supply shock, as it doesn't have the compute). The US and EU both have coming demographic issues, but not as soon as the other stuff becomes more important. People talk about China having demographic issues too, but they're a dictatorship, they can make it shift if they care to.
(And Russia's losing a lot of people, more educated people, capital markets, industrial base, and energy supply).
Sure, but until then, proportional to each of [population, education/educated workers, capital, instantaneous industrial base, energy supply].
Asia's diverse, but I'd say they seem to be doing pretty well with rapid improvements across all fronts.
In comparison, the US's weaker (not weak-weak, just weaker) areas currently seem to be educated workers, instantaneous industrial base, and energy supply (relative to rapidly growing demand from compute); while the EU's weaker areas currently seem to be capital and energy supply (from supply shock, as it doesn't have the compute). The US and EU both have coming demographic issues, but not as soon as the other stuff becomes more important. People talk about China having demographic issues too, but they're a dictatorship, they can make it shift if they care to.
(And Russia's losing a lot of people, more educated people, capital markets, industrial base, and energy supply).