The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - UK Elections: Starting Over || Peter Zeihan
Episode Date: July 10, 2024In case you've been buried neck deep in US political news, there are some fairly important elections taking place across the globe. For the first country in our little global election coverage, we'll ...be looking at the United Kingdom. Full Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/zeihan/uk-elections-starting-over
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Everybody, Peter Zion here coming to you from Micah Gulch in Colorado.
It is the 8th of July, and I'm taking a quick break from hiking to update everybody on what's been going on with all these crazy elections.
We talked about the United States last week.
Yeah, lots of hate mail from that one.
So it's only fair to cover three other countries that have had elections over the last few days.
And they're going to be the United Kingdom, Iran, and France.
And we're going to do the United Kingdom today because it's the simplest of the three, if you can believe.
that. In order to understand where we are now, it really helps to start a couple hundred years ago.
If you go back before the Industrial Revolution, if you go back before deepwater navigation,
the United Kingdom, or as it was known, England, really didn't matter all that much. It was a
relatively smallish population on a relatively large island off the coast of Europe, and most of the
mainland countries, especially France, had far a larger population and were far more significant.
But when deep water navigation was developed by the Iberians, eventually that technology migrated to a country that could use it better.
And that would be an island and that was the UK.
And all the income that came from a deep water navigation empire forced the United Kingdom to, well, induce the United Kingdom to do two things.
Number one, all this income had to be processed.
And so we got things like the London Stock Exchange and the financial heart and the square mile and all the things that make London, London today, a place where you're,
process capital, put it into places around the world where it will be more and more efficient.
And being the primary global node for the empire meant that it was the primary global node for
everyone. Well, that was piece one. Piece two, all this capital floating around the United
Kingdom meant that they, you had a lot of people who were developing new ideas and eventually
that manifested as the industrial revolution. So that is basically what has always made the United
Kingdom special. The ability to leverage
deep water navigation and to take it somewhere else, to generate the new technologies of industrialization,
to create a global financial hub. That is why London is London. That is why the UK is the UK.
That is why we think of the UK as a world power. But of course, history doesn't stand still.
Just as deep water navigation was a new suite of technologies and migrated to a place that could use it
better, so too did industrialization. And it went to Germany, which generated the German Reich in time.
and it went to the United States, which generates the country that we have here and that we know now.
In addition, London was hardly the only financial hub.
Every country that has a mercantile existence or an empire has to have one.
It's just that Brits were first and largest.
And if you look across the pond at the United States, you had New York.
It started out as the mouth of the Hudson, and that was the big economic artery.
And eventually that was linked to the Great Lakes.
But eventually you got the Cleveland Road, which dumped a lot of product out in the
Chesapeake, which was really close to New York. And eventually the Great Lakes and the Cumberland Road
ended up in the middle of the continent with the Mississippi River system. And all of the cargo that
went up and down the Mississippi could also use the Barry Island change to make it all the way
back to Chesapeake. And oh, look and behold, you're pretty close to New York again. So without
having an empire in the classic sense, New York became the financial hub, primary financial up,
by some measures, almost only financial up for the United States. And so when you get into the
post-World War II environment,
Things got a little dodgy for the Brits.
What made them special about industrialization had moved on.
What made them special about finance had competition.
And in the post-World War II environment, the Americans made it very clear
that if you wanted the American security guarantee,
all of your colonies had to be able to go their own way.
And so the empire that had made London, London, went away.
And we saw a catastrophic drop in the United Kingdom's global reach,
their standard of living, their significance, and their wealth. Until the early 1970s, when the United
Kingdom successfully joined the European Union. Now, say what you will about the rest of the Europeans,
finance was never their forte. They tended to be more socialist, statist economies. And so when you
had all this apparatus of financial strength in London looking for something to do, it was very quickly
able to emerge, not as a global financial hub, but as a European financial hub. And what
while they had lost their global empire from a financial point of view, it's like they got a new one
in Europe. And so German, Spanish, French, and Italian finance and all the rest came to London.
And so from 1970, what year did they get in? 73, 71, early 70s. Until relatively recently,
it was a model that worked really well, and because of the sheer bulk of Europe, and because of the
trading capacity of Europe, London once again was a strong financial hub. Until a few years ago,
when the Brits voted themselves out of the European Union without a backup plan.
For the last few years, under the conservative governments of Theresa May and Boris Johnson,
and on and on, they've had like, what, seven? Jeez.
Anyway, the Brits have basically been trying to have their cake and eat it to after voting that cake is illegal.
It's basically what it comes down to.
They've shut themselves off from the European system and induced the European,
to grab as much of the financial club that London used to have as possible.
The Americans, of course, have taken more than their fair share as well.
And that just leaves the United Kingdom with what's generated by the United Kingdom
and then a few stray wisps here and there.
They made a go at being the completely unethical hub,
particularly for Russian money,
but in the aftermath of the Ukraine war, a lot of that has lost its luster.
And if you want to do Arabic financing, you're not going to come to London,
you're going to go to Dubai.
So all of the financial flows that made London an industrial and a financial hub are pretty much gone.
And the last big chunk is gone because the Brits voted themselves out of the system.
So what we have now is not so much a shift from the right to the left.
If you guys haven't seen the election results, they're pretty damning.
The conservatives lost roughly two-thirds of their seats, the ruling conservatives,
and labor, which has been in opposition for the last 14 years,
basically doubled their seat count and will be able to rule without needing a coalition partner.
But this isn't a shift from conservative policies to liberal policies. This is simply a reflection
of the catastrophic reduction in economic possibilities that Brexit has imposed upon the United
Kingdom and blaming the government happens to be in charge. Whether that is fair or not, of course,
is dependent upon your personal politics. But for the United Kingdom to matter again, one of two things
has to happen. Number one, it needs to join another group where it is far and away going to be
the financial hub. That's not going to be Europe. They're not going to get back into Europe, even if
they apply right now, unless they agree to a lot of strictures that was what induced them to leave in
the first place. Or second, they have to have a top to bottom root and branch economic reformation
to reflect the fact that the London financial hub is no more. And what made them special
in the industrial era has changed as well. They need a new way to build and they need a new way to process.
They need a new way to manufacture. And most importantly, they have to have access to a large market to
absorb a lot of the output. Considering that the world is de-globalizing, that's a really tall offer.
Considering that the Europeans are no longer in a position where they can absorb British goods,
that's not even an option. The only option is North America, and that means integrating with North
America on North America's terms. That will guarantee and end London as a financial hub, because
under the terms of any trade deal, New York will absorb all of that. And it will certainly restructure
what's left of British manufacturing to satisfy NAFTA goals. And that means a lot of investment into
Mexico from the Brits. And that means changing a lot of the norms that the Brits have gotten
used to to match American and Canadian norms. So no matter how this goes from here,
What has made the United Kingdom special is gone.
And what remains to be seen is whether the new government under labor
can really wrap their arms and their minds around the scale of the change to the British condition
that has to be implemented here if Britain is going to be anything other than a failing middle power,
which is perhaps what the Brits fear more than anything.
