Living in such tense and mercurial times, it’s easy to see
that most Americans do not have a strong confidence in their country’s
future, with about 60% thinking it’s headed in the wrong direction, according to the polling data
from RealClear Politics. They are sharply divided by politics, by the
role America should play in the world, by how to utilize science and
education. All such sentiment is not only warranted but indicates the
reality that the American Empire is in its last years, if you believe
the prediction of the noted historian Alfred McCoy. He laid out his vision for the monumental transformation of the global order in the near future in an interview with The Intercept’s Jeremy Scahill.
McCoy
sees the election of Donald Trump to Presidency as a defining moment.
He does not think Trump himself is the cause of the waning American
power, but rather a symptom of it. Nonetheless, McCoy regards Trump as
likely to hasten the downward trajectory.
The
historian writes that all negative trends that are plaguing America now
are likely to get much worse, growing rapidly by 2020, and would “reach a critical mass no later than 2030.”
“The
American Century, proclaimed so triumphantly at the start of World War
II, may already be tattered and fading by 2025 and, except for the
finger pointing, could be over by 2030,” writes McCoy.
A lifelong observer of America's trajectory, in 1972, McCoy wrote “The Politics of Heroin,” a seminal book on the CIA involvement in the heroin trade during the Vietnam War. His new book “In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power” is coming out in September. He currently teaches history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
He
describes the coming 2020s as a “demoralizing decade of rising prices,
stagnant wages, and fading international competitiveness.” He blames
decades of growing deficits on “incessant warfare in distant lands”. By
2030, the U.S. dollar will lose its status as the world’s dominant
reserve currency, marking the empire’s loss of influence.
This
change will prompt dramatic price increases for American imports. Costs
on overseas travel for tourists and troops will increase as well.
Washington will be forced to slash its budget, causing a pullback and
shrinking of American forces. Like a “fading superpower incapable of
paying its bills,” America will then be continuously challenged by
powers like China, Russia, Iran and others for control over “ the
oceans, space, and cyberspace.”
Domestically,
the changes in America’s power will lead to a worsening of the standard
of living, with skyrocketing prices and tensions that will lead to a
“major rewriting of the American social contract,” according to McCoy.
Republican
presidential candidate Donald Trump greets supporters after his rally
at Ladd-Peebles Stadium on August 21, 2015 in Mobile, Alabama. (Photo by
Mark Wallheiser/Getty Images)
What role will Donald Trump play in this scenario? McCoy sees the new President as setting out to demolish “the essential pillars of U.S. global power”. Namely, weakening alliances with NATO
and Asian partners, as well as cutting back on scientific research that
has for a long time given the edge to the U.S., its military industrial
complex, in particular. He also cites other examples of U.S. being
withdrawing from global leadership, like its new stance on the Paris
Climate Accord and the TPP.
McCoy
acknowledges that the U.S. has already reached a point where it’s no
longer the dominant global power, with its share of the global economy
getting smaller. Indeed, the U.S. portion of the global Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) has declined
from 40% in 1960 to 22% today. Essentially, America’s economic role is
nearly half of what it used to be. By 2030, China will jump ahead and
become the world’s preeminent economic superpower.
The
historian also thinks that while some presidents like George H.W. Bush
worked to expand the U.S. influence around the world, Trump is pursuing
the opposite agenda.
“I think he’s accelerating perhaps markedly, even precipitously, the U.S. decline,” says McCoy.
He also singles out the importance of supporting research, alarmed by Trump’s current policies.
“What
Trump doesn’t seem to understand is that there’s a close relationship
between basic research, like research in artificial intelligence, and
your capacity to come up with the next new thing that will give the
United States a leading edge in military technology. And that’s what he
doesn’t understand, that’s the one way he’s damaging the whole complex,”
argues McCoy.
Besides
the geopolitical changes, McCoy points to the growing failures within
the “intellectual infrastructure of the country” as being responsible
for America’s downturn. He makes the argument that maybe we should pay attention to all the statistics we often hear about, like the disturbing PISA rankings
that have American students coming in 41st in math and 25th in science
on the global scale. Students from countries like Singapore, Hong Kong
and, China are in the top 5 in all categories. It’s not
hard to imagine that by 2030, these students will be “super smart
scientists and engineers that are coming up with the cutting edge
technology,” says McCoy.
And
if you think this only concerns gadgetry, McCoy sees this “erosion” of
educational standards in the U.S. leading to “very serious implications
for our military technology.” The American military might will suffer
greatly as well.
“The
technological and educational shifts coming together means that there
are all kinds of ways for the U.S. to lose power. Either with a bang or a
whimper. But by 2030, it’s pretty much over for our global dominion,”
predicts McCoy.
Lest you
think America’s got it coming and it’s about time it loses its world
status, McCoy warns that whoever will take its place will not wield
power in the “comparatively benign and beneficent” way that the U.S.
has. For all its faults, America’s great experiment has brought
worldwide advancements in women’s rights, gay rights, democracy and
human progress in general.
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