Fear the Chinese Vehicle Fleet?

Links to this story last week by Stuart Staniford have been popping up in a number of places in recent days, most likely due to the rather disturbing graphic below that shows what happens if the 23 percent annual growth rate of China’s vehicle fleet continues.

Yesterday, I posted a graph of the relative size of the US Interstate and Chinese Expressway systems, and pointed out that they are now of roughly equal size.  Commenter Joel noted, based on personal experience, that the Chinese system is comparatively empty.  Statistics on the size of the two vehicle fleets bear this out.  The graph above is based on FHWA data (via the Transportation Energy Data Book), and the Chinese NBS Table 16-25, and includes both trucks and passenger vehicles for both countries.

Absent a sharp slowdown in growth in China, I’d say there is good reason to fear the growing number of gasoline/diesel powered vehicles in the Middle Kingdom.

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Market prognosticator and Gloom, Boom, and Doomer Marc Faber was again warning about falling stocks prices, money printing, and war, the latter due in part to growing income inequality in both developed and emerging market economies. After speaking at the Ira Sohn Conference yesterday, he talked to Bloomberg’s Carol Massar.

Skip to about 10:30 to hear Faber comment on what disturbs him the most these days:

For my taste, in front of luxury hotels there are far too many Ferraris, Maseratis, Bentleys. That is not a good sign. You should see depression when conditions are depressed. I see a boom everywhere, except for the working class and except for the lower middle class. But among the well to do people, the wealth that is floating around and the prices you pay for high end properties is incredible, and I think that will come to an end, and a lot of people will lose a lot of money … This gives me a bad feeling because I’ve seen so many emerging economies when they were booming, that was the time to get out.

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The Problem with Humans

In addition to the many thoughts offered up about natural resources by Jeremy Grantham in his Q1 2011 letter in which he argues that this time might really be different -

Time to Wake Up: Days of Abundant Resources
and Falling Prices Are Over Forever (.pdf)

comes this observation about  humans in general that provides a brief diversion from what is otherwise a rather grim outlook for our collective future, price-wise.

As a product of hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of years of trial and error, it is perhaps not surprising that our species is excellent at many things. Bred to survive on the open savannah, we can run quite fast, throw quite accurately, and climb well enough. Above all, we have excellent spatial awareness and hand eye coordination. We are often flexible and occasionally inventive.

For dealing with the modern world, we are not, however, particularly well-equipped. We don’t seem to deal well with  long horizon issues and deferring gratification. Because we could not store food for over 99% of our species’ career and were totally concerned with staying alive this year and this week, this is not surprising. We are also innumerate. Our typical math skills seem quite undeveloped relative to our nuanced language skills. Again, communication was life and death, math was not. Have you not admired, as I have, the incredible average skill and, perhaps more importantly, the high minimum skill shown by our species in driving through heavy traffic? At what other activity does almost everyone perform so well? Just imagine what driving would be like if those driving skills, which reflect the requirements of our distant past, were replaced by our average math skills!

We also became an optimistic and overconfident species, which early on were characteristics that may have helped us to survive and today are reaffirmed consistently by the new breed of research behaviorists. And some branches of our culture today are more optimistic and overconfident than others. At the top of my list would be the U.S. and Australia. In a well-known recent international test, U.S. students came a rather sad 28/40 in math and a very mediocre eighteenth in language skills, but when asked at the end of the test how well they had done in math, they were right at the top of the confidence list. Conversely, the Hong Kongers, in the #1 spot for actual math skills, were averagely humble in their expectations.

Obviously, there was a huge opportunity lost here when Grantham failed to comment on the skills of Asian drivers, perhaps drawing some broader conclusion that, while likely being politically incorrect, would possibly set some expectations for answering the question of  U.S. vs. China  dominance later in this century.

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Donald Trump for President?

Real estate developer and TV star Donald Trump talks about the many ills of U.S. economic policy and his upcoming effort to change that via a run for President in 2012.

We are a laughing stock throughout the world … If oil prices are allowed to keep inflating, if the dollar keeps going down in value – which is not good because you’re going to pay $25 for a loaf of bread pretty soon – if you look at what’s happening with our food prices, they’re going through the roof. You know, we could end up being another Egypt – you could have riots in our streets also.

BTW: I don’t know where part 2 is, but, there are highlights of it in this item over at the Economic Collapse blog where this video was spotted.

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There were a number of interesting graphics last week showing the impact of rising food prices on the official government measure of inflation for different countries around the world (e.g., see here and here). In today’s Daily Chart at the Economist, they take a stab at it as well using what appears to be a stacked column chart of the percentage contribution to overall inflation from three important groups – food, energy, and everything else.

Perhaps more interesting than the food segments in the horizontal bars above are the light blue segments for “Other”. As I recall, it is higher taxes in the U.K. that makes that component so big, however, I have no idea what could contribute about 7 percentage points to overall inflation in India – that’s even bigger than the food component that everybody’s been screaming about lately.

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Obama, Hu in SNL Joint Press Conference #3?

When U.S. President Barack Obama met with Chinese President Hu Jintao in Beijing in November of 2009, this is what the folks over at Saturday Night Live came up with as a press conference parody. It was well received.

The one that came a year later after a G20 meeting in South Korea met with mixed reviews as noted here. In my view, they went quite a bit too far in this one. Will they offer another take on U.S.-China relations this weekend after Hu’s visit to Washington? We’ll see.

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