Six Maps that will Make You Rethink the World
Six Maps that will Make You Rethink the World
Thursday, August 18, 2016 1:29
Clerk Note: Can you hear the ghost of the Vatic Master saying: “This is a must read!” The second image is something I’ve always intuitively known; “These seven colorful patches are the natural topography and economic geography of the United States.” Seven is simpler than Fifty (plus territories).
Also pay attention to the “map by the New Scientist, a very
respected British journal. They made this forecast of where global food
production would be relocated to if the world rises four degrees Celsius
above the 1990 baseline, which of course the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change uses.”
The future, whether we will or not.
+++
Six maps that will make you rethink the world
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/04/29/six-maps-that-will-make-you-rethink-the-world/
By: Ana Swanson
Date: 2016-04-29
Date: 2016-04-29
We don’t often question the typical world map that hangs on the walls
of classrooms — a patchwork of yellow, pink and green that separates
the world into more than 200 nations. But Parag Khanna, a global
strategist, says that this map is, essentially, obsolete.
Khanna is the author of the new book
“Connectography: Mapping the Future of Global Civilization,” in which
he argues that the arc of global history is undeniably bending toward
integration. Instead of the boundaries that separate sovereign nations,
the lines that we should put on our maps are the high-speed railways,
broadband cables and shipping routes that connect us, he says. And
instead of focusing on nation-states, we should focus on the dozens of
mega-cities that house most of the world’s people and economic growth.
I spoke with Khanna about several of the incredible maps from his
book, which he uses to illustrate some proposals for our future world
that might, at first glance, seem pretty far out — like dividing the
United States into seven economic mega-regions or politically
integrating North America. But with the world rapidly changing and
urbanizing, these proposals might be the best way to confront a
radically different future.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
One of the most impressive maps in your book is the map
of the world’s mega-cities. You say that by 2030, more than 70 percent
of people will live in cities, and that these cities matter a lot more
than the countries that they’re in. What does this map tell us?
This is the most accurate map that’s ever been made of where people
are and the economic value of what they do. Our team took the entire
world’s population and plotted it by density, and they superimposed the
largest urban archipelagos, the mega-cities, with those ovals to show
the value of those cities vis-Ã -vis the national economy. [Note: You can click on the maps to enlarge them.]
The map tells us that the world economy is much more structured
according to the gravity of these 40 or 50 megacities than the world’s
200 sovereign nations. In almost all countries, cities have all the
economic mass and most of the population, and people are moving to
cities by the hundreds of millions.
The example of Johannesburg and Pretoria, the capital cluster of
South Africa, is revealing. It represents something like 35 to 40
percent of the country’s gross domestic product, and South Africa is a
very large country, with more than 50 million people. So much of the
population is there, and the country’s connectivity depends on that
city, because that’s where all the multinational corporations are
headquartered. It’s the same logic in Lagos — there is practically no
Nigeria without Lagos. It applies to Sao Paulo in Brazil, Jakarta in
Indonesia, Moscow in Russia, Istanbul in Turkey, and every single dot
and oval you see on the map.
The good news for America is we have so many major cities that we
have a distributed economy. Other countries are not so lucky. Russia is
bigger than America, but it has one city that drives the whole country.
The map from your book that’s probably received the most
attention is the United States broken down into seven economic
mega-regions, all of which are driven by urban centers. You say that a
high-speed railway could connect these cities, creating a “United
City-States of America.” Why do you think we need to reorganize this
way?
These seven colorful patches are the natural topography and economic
geography of the United States. It separates the U.S. into areas that
focus on farming, automobile manufacturing, technology, finance,
tourism, national parks, etc. Each of those regions has an urban anchor
that serves as a financial and business center, a population center and a
transportation hub. That’s what those white patches are. Then we need
the black lines, which are the high-speed rail networks and freight
railways connecting these regions to each other.
Parag Khanna, “Connectography: Mapping the Future of Global Civilization”
We need to rethink the political and functional geography in the
United States. It’s kind of ridiculous that we use 200-year-old logic to
govern the economics and functional reality of day-to-day life in our
country. Of course, we do it for votes — having 50 states is great if
you’re running around in a primary. But it doesn’t help you make America
a more viable or competitive economy.
All of the feedback I’ve gotten about this map has demonstrated that
there is so much frustration with the layers and layers of bureaucracy,
for the police and the education system and the government, in large and
small states. All we do is duplicate bureaucracy, when we should be
regionalizing our coordination of economic affairs. Of course, there are
a bunch of birthers who have been like, ‘Who the hell is this
technocrat guy who doesn’t live in America, is he even American, does he
have the right to do this?’ But I do see the enormous groundswell in
support of these ideas.
But this reorganization is so dramatic – could we even do this?
We have the ability to do this. I hate to make the punch line
something that’s so banal, which is “It’s all Congress’s’ fault,” but
it’s all Congress’s fault. All Congress has to do is to make sure that
instead of district- and state-level pork barrel project spending,
projects have some kind of cross-border dimensions, so that American
citizens, whatever state they live in, can be better connected to the
big cities. And if you do that, the laws of economics will take over,
and people will more freely engage in commerce.
A map like this would enable Americans to flow more freely around the
country. That is the difference between America and the European Union.
We are a United States; you don’t need to go through a border check to
cross state lines. And yet we’re not taking advantage of that freedom of
mobility across this incredible geography.
Right now, the political conversation in the United
States and elsewhere seems to be more focused on the rejection of free
trade and of immigrants, and uncertainties about the future of
transnational projects like Eurozone. How does that jibe with your
overall theory that the world is becoming far more connected and
integrated?
We have to distinguish between what some people in politics are
saying, and what the reality is. We can’t treat the fact that Donald
Trump has an idea about a wall, or that Bernie Sanders is against
certain trade agreements, as reality. Almost every syllable that you
hear in the populist discourse is wrong.
In the real world right now, we have more trade, more immigration,
more cross-border investment than at any point in history. We are
massively expanding global flows in goods, services, finance, people,
data. You name it, it’s going up.
If you look at the United States and Mexico, most of the world views
Mexico as a very hot emerging market. That’s true of American companies:
The American financial industry is buying into pipelines and power
grids, and American automobile manufacturers are relocating. And they’re
doing so not just because of cheap labor, but because Mexico has
preferential trade agreements with other Latin American countries, which
means if you manufacture there you can generate more sales in a
fast-growing region.
When an American car manufacturer relocates some production to
Mexico, yes, some jobs are moved. However, the car manufacturer is able
tostay solvent, because it saves costs and builds more cars, and built
into the agreement is a requirement that North American suppliers are
preferred for that automobile plant. The number of people employed in
auto part supply making in the U.S. — high-tech air bag makers,
anti-lock braking sensor developers, and reflective lights developers —
is also in the hundreds of thousands, and those companies benefit. Those
are the sort of new high-end manufacturing jobs that ultimately matter
if you want American workers to move up the value chain within advanced
manufacturing. They can be expensive suppliers to the lower-wage car
manufacturers in Mexico.
Our inability to do that is our fault. You hear Bernie Sanders and
Donald Trump scapegoating globalization — it’s the dumbest thing I’ve
ever heard. America has been the creator and driver of globalization
over the last 25 years. Yes, it is now a more level playing field, and
we are not always the winners, but that is the fault of politics and bad
policy. In 2004, a pillar of John Edwards’s presidential campaign was
worker retraining programs for new industries. Twelve years later, where
is that program? Just because we didn’t create it, doesn’t mean it
doesn’t exist. The Germans did it, the Swiss did it, the Koreans do it.
Other countries don’t blame globalization, they manage it, they take
advantage of it. I think we failed to do that, and that’s what explains
Trump and Sanders.
Speaking of these connections between the U.S. and
Mexico, one of your maps shows how North America is increasingly
integrated. I know you mention in your book that the U.S.-Mexico border
is the most frequently traversed border in the world, and the
U.S.-Canada border is also extremely busy. Why is North America so
integrated?
Parag Khanna, “Connectography: Mapping the Future of Global Civilization”
One of the titles I’ve given the map is ‘Think geology, not
nationality.’ America is now suddenly the largest oil producer in the
world. The American energy revolution is the most significant
geopolitical event since the end of the Cold War, and it’s a major shift
in the world’s tug of war. Ten years ago, we were all talking about how
the United States and China were going to fight resource wars for
Middle Eastern oil and minerals in Africa. Now, thanks to this
incredible seismic revolution, we’re selling oil to China instead.
The reason this relates to North America is because, if you think
about strategy in the geological terms, you realize that if the U.S.,
Canada and Mexico unite their energy, water, agriculture and labor
resources, you create a continental empire that is more powerful than
America is. I’ve not even mentioned the Arctic, which of course Canada
controls half of, which is becoming a very strategic geography as the
Arctic ice melts. Canada is going to potentially be the world’s largest
food producer in 20-25 years as a result of climate change. And then
there’s water. The southwestern United States is now in a perennial
drought, and yet at the same time, perversely, is the site of the
fastest growing population in the United States. So hydrological
engineering may need to take place between Canada and the United States.
The way you build this continental superpower is connecting North
America together. The more pathways and routes you have for supply to
meet demand, the more resilient your system. So that’s why that map
should be taken extraordinarily seriously. It is not just a pretty
picture, it is literally what American grand strategy should be in the
21st century.
You mentioned the issue of climate change and food
production. One of the most fascinating maps in the book shows how
global considerations might change if the world becomes four degrees
Celsius warmer. Much of the United States becomes uninhabitable desert,
while cities and food-growing zones shift to Canada.
This is a map by the New Scientist, a very respected British journal.
They made this forecast of where global food production would be
relocated to if the world rises four degrees Celsius above the 1990
baseline, which of course the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
uses. Where today the world’s largest food producers are the United
States, Brazil, China, India, Australia and so forth, it could be that
30 years from now or less, the world’s largest food producers are Canada
and Russia.
Parag Khanna, “Connectography: Mapping the Future of Global Civilization”
This is ironic for a host of brutal reasons. First, these are two of
the most sparsely populated countries in the world. Do you know what the
world population is north of 66 degrees latitude, near the Arctic
Circle? It’s less than the population of Manhattan. For this book, I
went up to the northernmost tippy-top of Norway to look at the Arctic
supply chain. Not only are temperatures rising there, but populations
are growing, new towns are developing, ports and shipping industries are
thriving, in these super cold places. And I met these old people who
actually remember when things were a lot colder, because it’s not as
cold as it used to be, though for me it was still damn cold.
The year 2050 or 2100 seems like light-years away. But if we agree
that climate change is not getting reversed or slowed down by our
current efforts, you have to take seriously the idea that the world’s
existing political boundaries and restricting the movement of people
don’t make a lot of sense. Canada isn’t going to be just for the
Canadians, and what we today call Russia isn’t just going to be for the
rapidly diminishing Russian population.
You also have a map that looks at “The New Arctic
Geography.” This isn’t a view of the world that a lot of people are used
to looking at, but something they will need to get more used to over
the next decades. What is the importance of this region and these
shipping lanes?
They play a very significant role in geopolitics. The world has four
significant maritime choke points, three of which are geopolitically
sensitive — the Suez Canal, the Strait of Hormuz and the Strait of
Malacca. We have feared for 100 years that there could be an act of
terrorism or war that would block one of these choke points and disrupt
global trade and energy flows.
Parag Khanna, “Connectography: Mapping the Future of Global Civilization”
But Arctic shipping is a faster and better system. Tragic as climate
change is, it opens up these new passageways to Europe, to North
America, into the Hudson Bay. So the way into the heart of North America
may eventually be these Arctic shipping routes.
Let me ask you about your map of Eurasia’s “new Silk
Roads,” which shows some of the projects being built by the Chinese-led
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. You also describe competitive
connectivity as the next arms race. Compared with the United States, is
China really winning the battle for connectivity?
There is no final winner in this competitive connectivity, and it’s
not zero sum. We’re all benefiting in some way from this build-out of
infrastructure that has been neglected for decades.
This map of the new Silk Roads shows the railways, pipelines and so
forth that are going to be built by the Asian Infrastructure Investment
Bank and other organizations across much of Eurasia. Right now, Europe’s
trade with China is almost the same as Europe’s trade with America.
Just imagine how big that economic bloc will be when all of those trade
corridors are complete and you have seamless transportation between
Europe and Asia.
Parag Khanna, “Connectography: Mapping the Future of Global Civilization”
America definitely took the wrong approach, which was to try to block
the creation of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. Meanwhile our
closest allies — Britain, Germany, European countries — signed on as
the bank’s charter members. The Obama administration basically pretended
like this was a zero-sum tug of war over allies, but they didn’t
realize that America’s military alliance system is not the only way of
understanding global public goods. We think of security as the most
paramount global public good, and America is the leading provider of
that good. But what China has shown is that infrastructure is an equally
important public good. Hundreds of countries desperately need and want
infrastructure, and China is the world’s leading provider of that.
In the book, I have so many examples of why we should let China go
ahead and build all of these things, but we should be competing for the
lucrative value-added deals. We don’t have millions of American
construction workers to export to Africa. But when those countries
finally start to use their connectivity to build factories that are
making useful things, we should be the ones financing the deals and
selling the technologies. China builds up the world, and we get to
benefit from the growth of those markets.
Watch the world population grow in under six minutes
Watch human population grow from 1 CE to present and see projected
growth in under six minutes. One dot = 1 million people. Video via
WorldPopulationHistory.org.
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