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than 2020 and accelerating throughout the decade, and will need immi
grants to fill the gap. But it will need new workers at the same time that the
rest of the industrial world needs them. In the twentieth century, the prob
lem was limiting immigration. In the twenty- first century, the
problem will
be attracting enough immigrants.
The second collapse of Russia will appear to open the door to a golden age
for the United States. But a massive internal economic crisis caused by a short
age of labor will emerge just as the confrontation with Russia is ending.
We can already see the leading edge of this crisis today in the graying of
the population of advanced industrialized countries. Part of the crisis will be
social—the family structures that have been in place for centuries will con
tinue to break down, leaving larger numbers of elderly people with no one
to care for them.
And as I stated earlier, there will be more and more elderly
people to care for. This will create intense political struggle between social
conservatism and ever- changing social reality. We are already seeing this in
popular culture—from talk shows to politicians—but it will intensify dra
matically until a crisis point is reached in the mid-2020s.
The crisis will come to a head, if history is any guide,
in the presidential
election of either 2028 or 2032. I say that because there is an odd—and not
entirely explicable—pattern built into American history. Every fifty years,
roughly, the United States has been confronted with a defining economic
and social crisis. The problem emerges in the decade before the crisis be
comes apparent. A pivotal presidential election is held that changes the
country’s political landscape over the following decade or so. The crisis is re
solved, and the United States flourishes. Over the next generation, the solu
tion to the old problem generates a new one, which intensifies until there is
another crisis and the process repeats itself. Sometimes the defining mo
ment is not
readily apparent until later, and sometimes it can’t be missed.
But it is always there.
To understand the reasons why I believe we will see a crisis in the 2020s,
it’s important to understand this pattern in some detail. Just as you can’t in
vest in stocks without understanding historical patterns, you can’t make
sense out of my forecasting here without understanding American political
and economic cycles.
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In its history so far, the United States has had four such complete cycles
and is currently about halfway through its fifth. The
cycles usually begin
with a defining presidency and end in a failed one. So the Washington cycle
ends with John Quincy Adams, Jackson ends with Ulysses S. Grant, Hayes
with Herbert Hoover, and FDR with Jimmy Carter. Underneath the poli
tics, the crises are defined by the struggle between a declining dominant
class linked to an established economic model
and the emergence of a new
class and a new economic model. Each faction represents a radically differ
ent way of viewing the world and a different definition of what it means to
be a good citizen, and reflects the changing ways of making a living.
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