Hey everybody. Peter Zeihan here. Coming to you from the basement I grew up in. That sounds odd. It makes. It sounds like I was chained to a radiator for 15 years. No, that is not what happened. I just happened to be visiting my parents in Iowa. And I’m coming from the basement because the wind chill outside is zero right now, and that is not going to happen. 

Okay. Today is the 14th of January. And the big news is that Japan has recently released its newest demographic assessment of its country. They do this every year, after the United States. Japan is generally considered to have some of the best statistical capacity for their government in the world. And so I tend to trust their data quite deeply. 

They’re now saying that births per woman is 1.15, and anything under 2.1 suggests that your population is actually falling. And Japan’s is it is the, oldest demographic in humanity right now. But it is no longer, the world’s fastest aging. They’ve made some advances in health care. They’ve extended the ability, of the working age, in order to keep the workforce kind of stable, although it’s only had a mixed results. 

Made a little bit easier for people to have children. But still terminal. Terminal, terminal. But, they have slowed the decline to the point that they are no longer the world’s fastest aging society, and they haven’t been for well over a decade. Countries that are aging significantly faster than Japan include and are not limited to Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, China, China, according to official statistics, has a birth rate that is now lower than Japan’s but unofficial statistics. 

It’s maybe half that, but that’s a different topic for another day. Also some developing countries, Chile and Colombia and Latin America, even though they’ve have a very large young population, the birth rate has fallen off a cliff in the last ten years. In Southeast Asia, places like Thailand are aging faster. And in Europe, Italy, also probably Poland’s pretty close, although it might be neck and neck. 

And Ukraine is near the bottom, mostly because of the war. Anyway, the bottom line is that you can buy a little bit of time, but it’s really hard to turn the ship around once you drop below 2.1 and really no country yet that is slipped below has ever gone back up. So what does this mean? Well, number one, Japan, because it is an archipelago island nation. 

They don’t need to spend the same style, in defense. Not in terms of cost, but in terms of manpower. So if you’re a land power, you need an army. And Japan probably couldn’t field an army right now if it needed to. But it can easily field a navy. So even that might cost a little bit more and certainly more power per soldier or sailor. 

It could they can still have a projection based military system. And in this case, Japan has the second most powerful navy in the world in projection terms, which is about right size to what they need. They might need to do a little bit more as trade breaks down, but they’ve already changed their economic structure to relocate industrial plant into allied countries that have better demographics, like, say, Mexico in the United States or Indonesia and Myanmar. 

That’s issue one. So even though that they’re aging, they’re not aging as fast as a lot of countries around them, and they’ve got some military options that no one else can consider. Second big issue is that the demographic bomb is not limited to the rich world at all. China, by most definitions, remains some version of a developing country. 

And they arguably have by far the lowest birth rate in the world. And that fact that we’re seeing some countries in Southeast Asia and even in Latin America now dropping below half of replacement level, gives you an idea of just how deep this is. In fact, the country in the world that has seen the largest drop in the birth rate in the last 35 years is none other than Yemen. 

They’re still above replacement, but barely. But they’ve gone from eight children to a woman to two children per woman, like 35 years. So this is something that is coming for everyone. The question now, from my point of view, is how this integrates with globalization in general. Because if you start breaking down international supply chains, then some of the things that allowed industrialization to kick in and large portions of the world suddenly become up for grabs. 

In the case of manufacturing, that means if you are participating in a multi-state manufacturing system, all of a sudden that is useless. And so you have an older population that doesn’t consume as much and maybe can’t adapt as quickly, suddenly have to change their industrial base in order to function. Second problem is, of course, agriculture. 

Pesticides come from one place, herbicides from another, farm equipment from another part for farm equipment, typically from yet another. And then there’s three types of fertilizer potassium, nitrogen and phosphorus. Oh, Anyway, oftentimes those come from different places as well. You break down supply chains, and all of a sudden the food supply is a problem. One of the things, one of the hallmarks of globalization is anything can be traded. 

And so you can take countries that pre 1945 couldn’t grow a lot of food and had a limited population or couldn’t access iron ore and so couldn’t industrialize it. Suddenly everyone could get everything. You break down those links, not all goes away. You do that on top of a demographic decay and you get combination of deindustrialization events, the population events, and maybe even civilizational events. 

So, shit’s getting real. We are getting very close to the edge. And not just because of the Trump administration, although the Trump policies are certainly moving things forward, but a country like Japan that has managed to slow the decline right size their military for the options they’re going to need, and that has wide access to the Pacific and can convoy their own trade if they need to. 

They’re going to be fine. So if you get along with Japan and the United States, you have the basis for starting whatever is next. I’m not saying everything is going to be hunky dory. But you’ll live in a security environment that is more favorable and you’ll have an economic access. That means that you’re not going to suffer the worst. And of course, if you don’t get along with those two countries and you happen to be in the Pacific Basin, then, well, students will study you 50 to 100 years from now as a great example of what to never do.