The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - No Mercy / No Malice: Least Bad
Episode Date: September 9, 2023As read by George Hahn. https://www.profgalloway.com/least-bad/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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I'm Scott Galloway, and this is No Mercy, No Malice.
The majority of our nation think we're doomed to failure.
Headlines are bleak. Sentiment is worse.
Three in four Americans say our country is in structural decline.
However, when you look at the data, there's a singular conclusion.
The U.S. is kicking ass.
Least bad, as read by George Hahn.
For decades, America has predicted, arrogantly and repeatedly, the imminent fall of a nation.
The doomed nation, according to Americans? Answer, America.
In the 80s, we decided Japan was doing to us economically what they couldn't do militarily
four decades prior. My second year in business school, Berkeley 92, was devoted to a forensic analysis of our loss to Japan.
Computers and cars were the future,
and Japan was building them faster, better, and cheaper.
In 1984, Walter Mondale asked Reagan at the presidential debates,
quote,
What do we want our kids to do?
Sweep up around the Japanese computers?
Unquote. Three years later, Paul Kennedy wrote a book about it. What do we want our kids to do? Sweep up around the Japanese computers?
Unquote.
Three years later, Paul Kennedy wrote a book about it,
The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers,
comparing the U.S. Empire to the British Empire.
Japan's GDP soared to 40% of ours, and we feared what might happen when that number hit 100.
It never did.
In the early aughts, our soft tissue was geopolitical. The tragedy of 9-11 was described as an inevitable outcome. Our subsequent invasion of Afghanistan inspired books including Dark Ages America, The Final Phase of Empire,
and Are We Rome? The Fall of an Empire and the Fate of America. Each offered a similar theme,
our time was running out. Today the decline is supposedly more imminent. January 6th was the beginning of the end.
Russia's invasion revealed a great unwinding.
Nations view us with pity,
and we are on the brink of collapse.
Just last week, the New York Times opinion page
compared us to Rome again.
These headlines are clickbait, and we still take the bait.
Three-quarters of Americans believe our country is in structural decline,
and the song of the summer is an ode to our demise.
Living in the new world
With an old soul It's not just the public.
Among economists, there's a growing school of thought that our situation is dire.
Two months ago, ratings agency Fitch downgraded America's credit rating
due to fiscal deterioration and erosion of governance.
The debt ceiling debacle didn't help.
Investors should worry. Our debt-to-GDP ratio is hovering around 120%.
Back when it was 70%, Brookings called it, quote, the real national security threat, unquote.
Many believe we are in the midst of de-dollarization, seeding our status as the world's reserve currency because of our unsustainable spending habits and an overall loss of faith globally.
J.P. Morgan recently flagged it, an ex-CIA advisor plainly predicted it, and one prominent tech investor bet $1 million on it. Ray Dalio, the founder of the
world's largest hedge fund, hinges his recent bestseller, Principles for Dealing with the
Changing World Order, on America's inability to adapt to our loss of status and power.
Empires win and lose their hegemony depending on their reserve currency status,
and in Ray's view, we're near freefall. Culturally, you could build a compelling case.
National pride is at an all-time low, and the vibe in America is that things are not good.
See above the song. But these are functions of perception,
and as I've written before, human perception is flawed. This is an economic discussion,
and when you look at the data, you'll find every diagnosis of our supposedly terminal illness
is proof the doctor is jonesing for us to die.
We'll examine them, but first, a brief summary of the Doomer's economic vision for America.
It goes roughly as follows.
One, America keeps borrowing more money, leading to an increased burden of interest payments.
Two, foreign nations increasingly question our ability to make good on our debts,
leading to low demand for U.S. Treasuries and thus low demand for dollars.
Three, once de-dollarization takes effect and the dollar is supplanted as the world's reserve currency,
the U.S. will be forced to ratchet up treasury
yields to increase demand for our debt, leading to even greater interest payments.
Four, this will crowd out private investment as well as public investment in our own infrastructure.
GDP growth will grind to a halt and eventually we'll default on our debt. Five, at that point we'll be
unable to borrow or finance our growth. And six, America will collapse.
Doomsday is due next century or next year, depending on who you ask.
That ex-CIA advisor said it'd be last month. But the catalysts
are consistent, and one of them is this notion of de-dollarization. The argument is that foreign
central banks are losing interest in the dollar. The stat de-dollarists point to is that the dollar has fallen from 70% share of the world's currency reserves to 60% in the past 20 years.
That may sound significant, but the scope is comically small.
When you zoom out, you find that in the 80s our share was 50%, and 30 years before, it was 40%.
The only accurate description of the dollar's reserve status over the past 75 years is
unwaveringly dominant.
At 20%, the next best option, the euro, is not within striking distance.
However, it's not the euro the dollarists are talking about,
but the currencies of ascendant nations, including China.
A common headline is, quote,
Yuan's share of global reserves hits record high, unquote.
Less common is any mention of that high, 2.6%.
The president of Brazil made headlines recently calling on the BRICS nations,
Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa,
to join forces to create a new global reserve currency.
The world's reaction was lackluster,
and even South Africa's own central bank governor
played it down. Quote, if you want it, you'll have to get a banking union, you'll have to get a fiscal
union, you've got to get macroeconomic convergence. Unquote. Translation? Pipe dream. One pipe the hallucinations flow through is Bitcoin.
Among its many use cases is its potential to supplant the dollar.
The argument?
The value of the dollar is predicated on faith in the U.S. government.
The value of Bitcoin is predicated on faith in, well, Bitcoin.
Many Bitcoin bulls argued the latter will ultimately win.
And for a second there in 2021, it looked feasible.
In terms of cryptocurrencies generally, I can say almost with certainty that they will come to a bad ending.
Now, when it happens or how or anything else, I don't know.
As with every other dollar competitor, though, the cryptocurrency ran out of steam.
Today, the total value of Bitcoin is 12 times smaller
than the amount of dollars held in global central bank reserves.
So next time someone tells you the dollar will be replaced, ask,
with what?
By any metric, the most innovative payment platform or store of value
has been and remains the U.S. dollar.
More good news?
Minting dollars doesn't require the energy consumption of Argentina.
But I digress. Arguments for America's decline are rarely accompanied by a credible alternative.
This is true of the dollar, and it's also true of U.S. debt.
Take Fitch's downgrade of our national credit rating, for example. What should have been a seismic shock to the global bond market by the premier ratings agency
turned out to be a catastrophist headline.
The bond market barely registered the news,
with the 10-year treasury yield inching up four basis points.
Goldman put it deftly, Jamie Dimon put it better.
The downgrade was,
quote,
As with currencies, creditworthiness is relative.
The question creditors should ask isn't,
how likely am I to get my money back?
It's, who's more likely to give me my money back?
And when it comes to sovereign debt,
there is no better option than the United States.
Sure, Xi Jinping makes Biden look like a web browser with 19 tabs open,
not knowing where the music is coming from.
But the Chinese Communist Party also systematically withholds,
suspends, and lies about the nation's economic data.
The party has even ordered its own economists to stop talking about negative trends.
Who would you rather lend to?
This extends beyond national debt.
There are several linchpin data points declinists point to
that are supposed to forecast our imminent undoing.
But the people who cite them also forget to compare those metrics to those of other nations.
For example, inflation.
Last year, inflation hit a 40-year high.
Some predicted America would enter a period of hyperinflation.
However, when you compare our situation to those of other nations, it's less bad.
Significantly less bad.
In the U.S., prices have risen 3.2% year over year.
In the U.K., it's 6.8%, more than double.
In the Eurozone, it's 5.3%.
And yet, U.S. inflation continuing to come down and wage growth recently surpassing
it, 74% of Americans still believe inflation is headed in the wrong direction.
Another catastrophist go-to, the debt-to-GDP ratio. Currently, our national debt amounts to 120% of our GDP.
In other words, we're borrowing more money than we're making.
Sounds bad,
until you look at other nations and realize it's,
wait for it, less bad.
Singapore is at 130%,
Italy at 150%. And Japan? At 260%. For years, economists have been
drawing red lines around no-go debt-to-GDP numbers, but time has shown these red lines are also meaningless. The Maastricht Treaty said don't go higher than 60%. The World Bank,
77%. One landmark Harvard study, Growth in a Time of Debt, claimed 90% was the tipping point.
That study caused panic until three years later, researchers found the data was faulty and the conclusion wrong.
The reality is there is no magic number.
Japan is at 260% and Botswana, 20%.
Would you rather hold Japanese yen or Botswana and Pula?
By nearly every measure, America is doing just fine.
Better than fine.
Our annual GDP is $26 trillion, 40% greater than China's, whose population is four times larger.
And despite our enormous output, our economy is still growing, with 2.4% GDP growth last quarter. China's is higher,
but slowing faster than expected. Meanwhile, the yuan continues to slide, and this week
hit a 16-year low. We have many unique advantages, including unrivaled innovation,
the best universities, the best military, strong rule of law, a willingness to embrace risk, and a culture of doing the right thing.
I believe this.
Last year, U.S. startups received $245 billion in venture funding, roughly equal to the rest of the world combined.
Upstream in the public markets, we remain dominant.
Nine of the ten largest companies in the world are domained in America.
NVIDIA, the undisputed leader in AI,
the next world-changing technology, is headquartered in Santa Clara. Investors have reaped the benefits
and continue to wager their money on America. In the past decade, the U.S. stock market has
returned 10% per year. Compare that to Europe, 2%, or China, 0.09%, or Australia, negative 0.2%.
Meanwhile, our near-term economic prospects look good.
Unemployment is hovering at record lows.
Inflation has fallen precipitously and is low relative to our peers.
See above.
Poverty rates are in decline.
Disposable income is higher than any other country. We have
a lot to be proud of. The schadenfreude we feel for our own country when it stumbles is nothing
new. In fact, I would argue that in a democracy, this is a feature, not a bug. Things appear
brighter when our favored political party is at the helm,
and vice versa when it isn't. A case in point is the Consumer Sentiment Index,
which is supposed to be an economic barometer, but is really a political one.
In 2019, Republicans felt great about the economy, Democrats less so. Then Biden got elected and the relationship flipped.
People will argue I'm optimistic because a Democrat's in charge.
I recognize my political bias and intentionally adjust for it. And still, when I look at the U.S.
economy and America's position as a global power, I repeatedly land on a singular conclusion.
The glass is half full.
This conclusion won't sell books nor grow this newsletter.
History has proven that the headline
Things Marginally Better Today does not get clicks.
But it's the truth. And the truth, as with most things in life,
is usually not as good or bad as we'd hoped. We are the least bad of our kind. When I look at the
data, much less my personal situation, I can't help but hate my life less and less every day.
If you are healthy, have someone who loves you,
and enjoy a household income greater than $34,000,
then you are in the top 1% globally.
Think about this.
You are 1 in 100.
Why?
Yes, you're talented and hardworking.
But more than that, you're talented and hardworking in what is the most innovative platform in history.
America.
Life is so rich.
What software do you use at work?
The answer to that question is probably more complicated than you want it to be.
The average U.S. company deploys more than 100 apps, and ideas about the work we do can be radically changed
by the tools we use to do it.
So what is enterprise software anyway?
What is productivity software?
How will AI affect both?
And how are these tools changing the way
we use our computers to make stuff,
communicate, and plan for the future?
In this three-part special series,
Decoder is
surveying the IT landscape presented by AWS. Check it out wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, it's Scott Galloway, and on our podcast, Pivot, we are bringing you a special series
about the basics of artificial intelligence. We're answering all your questions. What should
you use it for? What tools are right for you? And what privacy issues should you ultimately watch out for?
And to help us out, we are joined by Kylie Robeson, the senior AI reporter for The Verge,
to give you a primer on how to integrate AI into your life.
So tune into AI Basics, How and When to Use AI, a special series from Pivot sponsored
by AWS, wherever you get your podcasts.