The BRIC economies can kiss my -- standard of living


chessAn interesting post written by Joseph Lazzaro on Tuesday indicated that many economists think that the economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China, known as the BRIC economies, will supplant the United States and European nations in terms of world power and economic strength. While this may be true to a degree, I have a message for those emerging economic powerhouses: they had better be careful.

Dear Brazil, you have resources you can't yet even contemplate. However, you have been whacking through your opportunities at a very rapid pace. You have no idea about what political powers you should align yourself with. Can you reign in your pirates, your poachers, your drug lords? Can you effectively protect even just one of your trees?

Dear Russia, you scare me. The world knows more of your organized crime than it knows of your present government. You move more capital through your black markets than through your own ports. You turn your backs on true enterprise in exchange for quick profit.

Dear India, are you aware that the improvement you now see is just a thin mask over the face of exploitation? If you could see the contrast between what you should have and what you are getting, you'd be ashamed that you're selling yourself so cheaply. You are the target of corporate fat cats who have placed their bets on your hunger. They seek to bring us to your past, rather than to bring you to our present.

Dear China, you are a military communist power, playing a free market capitalist game. You have the strength to build yourself up, yet you have no idea how to compassionately police economic freedom. As your people become accustomed to the release from shackles that prosperity brings, will you be able to keep their growing minds satisfied and complacent in your 40-year old Chairman Mao framework? How long can you hold them at bay with your good intentions?

It may be true that world economic power is shifting. It may be true that world politics will be forced to adjust in reaction to new growth and investment. Today isn't the 1800s, or 1950, or even 1994. Simple logic and history will tell you that healthy economies don't move out and move on, especially so when new growth is more than ever dependent upon established strengths.

New economic growth is necessary and welcome, wherever it may happen. Perhaps someday the term "third world" will be a term long forgotten. Yet the one mistake which could bring the entire world economic growth proposition to an immediate screeching halt would be the single mindless error of forgetting exactly who it is that has been writing the checks for so long. A tree cannot grow strong new branches as it withers at the root.

Gary Sattler is a freelance, free market blogger and patriot.

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