India is ranked six out of 11 in the book. The US again score from zero to one one being the highest on empire strength. Dahlio is much more optimistic on China's prospects of overtaking the United States and yeah they they sort of are the same inverse on the United States.
Transcript
chevron_right
Play full episode
chevron_right
Transcript
Episode notes
Ray Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates, has written several books on the world of investing and the economy in general based on his years of experience as manager of the world’s largest hedge fund. In the latest of his ‘Principles’ series, Dalio applies his quantitative approach of macro investing to analyzing countries, seeking to identify the factors that lead to strength such as education and work ethic, as well as lagging indicators such as a reserve currency that allow a country to spend beyond its means but ultimately presage a fall from dominance. Notably, Dalio sees China’s rise to the top of global power as likely, with America, while ahead, slowly declining. Tonight we debate the merits of his analysis, as well as the overall validity of a global macroeconomic approach that overlooks key factors such as demographics in forecasting long term power status.