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By John Authers

in Anchorage summons bad memories of past summits in Munich or Yalta, in which the destiny of smaller Eastern European nations was decided by greater powers . But a fictional model from the postwar era seems more prophetic.

, written in 1948, tells of a world divided into three great powers. They are:

(The US, plus South America, the UK, Australia, and southern Africa).

(All of the old Soviet Union, including Russia, and continental Europe in its entirety).

(Essentially China, Japan, and the Korean peninsula).

They interminably over the contested, poorer parts of the world: the Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, the Arabian Peninsula, and the rest of Africa. Though alliances shift, they remain in permanent balance:

鈥淣one of the three super-states could be definitively conquered even by the other two in combination. They are too evenly matched, and their natural defenses are too formidable. Eurasia is protected by its vast land spaces, Oceania by the width of the Atlantic and the Pacific, Eastasia by the fecundity and industriousness of its inhabitants.鈥

That is from a fictional book that Orwell cites, written by Emmanuel Goldstein (a stand-in for ). Each bloc is self-sufficient. There is no trade between them, but they all benefit from the status quo.

Orwell鈥檚 terrifying template is a caricature of the world order he foresaw taking shape. Many of 1984鈥檚 horrors have not come to pass. But it鈥檚 a good place to start. When the actual year arrived, the world was divided into the US and Soviet empires and a large 鈥淭hird World.鈥 That had some similarities to the novel. A few years later, after the Berlin Wall had fallen, it appeared that a liberal globalized order had triumphed.

What is now taking shape looks closer to the book, with the US, Russia, and China trying to consolidate power around them, while countries like India might yet take different sides. Orwell was wrong to predict Russian domination of Western Europe, but the Alaska summit, and the terrified reaction in European capitals as the US has shown a willingness to withdraw support from Ukraine, shows that the possibility remains alive.

SPHERES OF INFLUENCE
The world thus appears to be returning to the concept of spheres of influence. Powers want to feel secure behind a barricade of neighboring states, without the great imperial ambitions of earlier eras. Ukraine looms large for Russia, and China has gone to the lengths of building islands in the as it covets Taiwan. Both aim to make themselves impregnable. The same philosophy animates Trump 2.0 foreign policy. Rather than maintain through institutions like NATO or the World Trade Organization, he wants . explains this as a return to the nation-state:

鈥淭rump鈥檚 goal is to abandon the maintenance of the empire and to reestablish the US nation-state in North America. This would explain his apparent territorial ambitions on Canada, Greenland, and the Panama Canal, as well as his emphasis on trade balances, tariffs and the importance of reindustrialization.鈥

Empires, he explains, don鈥檛 care where their steel comes from as they control the seas; a nation needs to be self-sufficient in such key products if it is to protect itself. Hence US attempts to thwart Chinese dominance over rare earths. And in many ways, it is a return to a world that didn鈥檛 long predate Orwell. , the US under Harry for Greenland.

America has long prized . Asked at a press conference earlier this year why he cared about Greenland and Panama, Trump said he 鈥渘eeded them for economic security.鈥 Like Russia and China, and Eurasia, Eastasia, and Oceania, the US wants to secure itself.

THE WINNERS AMID THE NEW BLOCS
Orwell鈥檚 three powers required self-sufficiency. That way, there would be no need for dangerous conflicts with others over land or resources 鈥 beyond the constant phony wars with which they kept their populations together. Other countries aren鈥檛 imposing their own tariff barriers in response to the US, but the widening need for self-reliance 鈥 or in economist-speak 鈥 is clear. With the world now on an Orwellian path, it鈥檚 possible to predict who can survive an autarkic world, and who will struggle. Vital factors include:

1. Reliance on Trade. Countries already less relatively dependent on trade face less upheaval, while small economies heavily oriented toward the trading system face existential difficulties. have total exports and imports of more than 300% of their gross domestic product. Life will be hard for them. Least-exposed nations are either very poor (Sudan鈥檚 trade makes up 6% of GDP) or very big. The US (24.9%) and China (35.3%) are among them, despite the huge volumes they trade.聽

2. Complexity. The more complex or hard to replicate a country鈥檚 economy, the better its chances. Those that rely on simple and easily substitutable industries like mining have a problem; but countries with a strong infrastructure and workforce with readily transferable skills can flourish. The , produced by the Growth Lab at Harvard University鈥檚 Kennedy School, ranks all of the world鈥檚 nations by complexity, from Singapore in first to Chad in 145th. Economies with surprisingly low rankings include Brazil (93rd) and Russia (100th); neither has managed to diversify much from its strengths in resources.

, the economist who heads the project, also cautions that there could be perverse effects that rebound on the US. Chile and Peru might find it harder to sell their copper 鈥 one of the least complex and most easily replicable of products 鈥 to America. Thanks to tariffs, it could be easier to sell to China. The US could also discover that its tariffs dissuade companies from producing anything within its borders for sale to the rest of the world.

3. Foreign Capital. Foreign capital can be than flows of trade can be reversed. As countries to make themselves self-sufficient, the US looks more vulnerable than anyone. According to Russell Napier of Orlock Advisors, foreign holdings of US liquid assets exceed American holdings of foreign assets by 58%. For German or British fund managers, their biggest pools of assets are US Treasuries. , the revamped version of that is taking hold, will require them to bring that money home.

Germany鈥檚 surplus on the same basis is equivalent to 100% of GDP, so repatriation would be a huge boon. It has been exporting capital and effectively propping up debtor economies like the US for years. That will likely have to change.

4. Homogenized Ideology. All of Orwell鈥檚 superpowers have the same ideology, badged differently in local colors to appeal to their people. This is from 鈥淕oldstein鈥:

鈥淚ngsoc in Oceania, New-Bolshevism in Eurasia, and Subjugation of the Self or Death-Worship, as it is commonly called, in Eastasia, had the conscious aim of perpetuating unfreedom and inequality. These new movements grew out of the old ones and tended to keep their names and pay lip-service to their ideology. But the purpose of all of them was to arrest progress and freeze history at a chosen moment.鈥

A common philosophy can be discerned today. MAGA Republicanism, (a descendant of Deng Xiaoping鈥檚 ), and the emerging doctrine some call all unapologetically put national interests first, allow the state to intervene aggressively in the private sector, and adhere to conservative social norms.

This concept isn鈥檛 new in China and Russia, and it鈥檚 gaining surprisingly easy consent in the US. Take the deal in which the government allowed AMD and , previously blocked on national security grounds, in return for a 15% cut of the profits. That made Washington a direct stakeholder in a private enterprise, the kind of blatant state intervention that US capitalists don鈥檛 usually tolerate. Yet negative reaction was minimal, and the stock market subsequently set an all-time high. 鈥淲e acknowledge the tax will have a negative impact on profit margins tied to China sales,鈥 said CFRA Research鈥檚 Angelo Zino, 鈥渂ut view the reentry into the second-largest GPU market to be worth the cost.鈥 He did add that the move 鈥減otentially creates a new precedent with other industries/trade partners.

Much as Winston Smith came to love in , Wall Street is learning to like MAGA capitalism. 鈥淚t鈥檚 better to have 85% of something than 100% of nothing,鈥 said Absolute Strategy Research鈥檚 Ian Harnett. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the mindset.鈥

As in Orwell鈥檚 three-power world, national capitalism creates a stable global equilibrium. With others following the model, there is no choice but to go along with it. US capitalism looks ever more like the version of communism pioneered by China. Napier wrote a book, . He said:

鈥淎fter the Asian crisis, everyone told me that free-market capitalism had destroyed Asian capitalism, but ultimately we鈥檝e all rapidly moved in that direction. It seems to be the only way to compete with Japan, Korea, and Chinese capitalism. We鈥檙e not going to meet where China is, but we are going to be closer. It鈥檚 capitalism with Chinese characteristics.鈥

Perhaps most significantly, national capitalism has also come to Germany. The campaign sees more than 60 companies, , committing to investing an extra 鈧100 billion ($116 billion) in the country over the next three years. Western Europe has mostly stood apart from Orwell鈥檚 predictions to date by avoiding Russian dominance; the greatest imponderable for the next few years is whether it can emerge from under the US wing, resist Russia, and establish itself as a fourth bloc.

Meanwhile India 鈥 exactly as predicted in 1984 鈥 stands as the biggest nation outside the major blocs whose fate remains fluid. But the subcontinent, along with Africa and the other contested territories in Orwell鈥檚 vision, might avoid the fate he mapped for them. 鈥淎bove all, they contain a bottomless reserve of cheap labor,鈥 says Goldstein in the book within the book, whose workers are 鈥渆xpended like so much coal or oil in the race to turn out more armaments.鈥

Orwell didn鈥檛 get everything right. But as Putin and Trump meet in a territory that Russia once sold to the US, they do appear to be conducting a world order uncomfortably similar to the one he imagined 77 years ago.

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