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  1. The 200-Year Deal Is Expiring
     
    Capitalism ran on a simple loop: More people → more
    workers → more wages → more consumers → more profits → more investment → more
    jobs. GDP growth was population + productivity. 
     
    That loop is stalling: 
    ·       Population:
    Working-age cohort globally peaks ∼2025.
    Japan, China, Korea, and Europe ex-immigration are already shrinking. 
    ·       Jobs:
    Goldman Sachs sees 300M jobs exposed to AI automation by 2030. Tesla, Figure,
    and Agility have humanoids piloting warehouse/factory work at $16-$30/hr all-in
    cost, falling ∼10%
    per year. 
     
    For the first time since the Black Death, we may have
    fewer workers and less need for them. The loop reverses: Fewer people + fewer
    jobs needed = who earns the income to buy what the robots make?
     
  2. Yes, Some Corporates Can Still Profit
    for 20 Years
     
    Degrowth ≠ no profits. It means profits concentrate.
    Japan 1990-2025 proves it:
    Company        Home
    Pop 1990-2020 EPS CAGR     How
    Keyence     -0.1% CAGR   ~16%  Sold factory sensors globally. 80% gross
    margin, no factories
    Toyota        -0.1% CAGR   ~8%    Exported 80% of cars.
    Hybrid tech = pricing power
    Novo Nordisk        +0.4% CAGR  ~18%  Diabetes drugs for aging
    world. 90% revenue outside Denmark
    The degrowth profit formula: 
    EPS growth = Pricing power × Productivity
    × Global share – Labour cost 
     
    If you raise prices 3%/yr, cut headcount 2%/yr via
    AI/robots, and sell to India/Africa where population still grows, you can
    compound 10-15% while home GDP = 0%. 
     
    But if only 20% of firms do that and employ 20% of
    workers, who buys the output?
     
  3. Who Will Buy When the Jobs Die? — With
    AI & Humanoid Robots
     
    There are only 5 sources of buying power. In degrowth
  • automation, 3 weaken and 2 must expand, or demand collapses.
     
    A. The State Becomes Buyer of Last
    Resort 
    When households can’t earn enough, governments run
    deficits and buy directly or via transfers. Japan: debt 60%→260% of GDP since
    1990 to fund pensions, healthcare, public works. That spending is GDP. 
     
    AI/robot twist:
    Governments will be the biggest buyer of elder-care humanoids, AI tutors, and
    infrastructure bots. Private jobs die, but public spending creates demand for
    robot fleets. Funded by taxes on robot owners. 
     
    Limit: Works only if you can print your currency.
    World Bank/IMF loans in USD can’t be inflated away.
     
    B. Retirees Spend Down Assets 
    Aging societies are asset-rich: Japan households hold
    2000 trillion yen, 3x GDP. US Boomers hold $80T. Retirees sell assets and buy
    services: healthcare, leisure, and now humanoid companions. 
     
    AI/robot twist:
    A humanoid elder-carer at $20k/yr vs human at $60k/yr is viable by 2028.
    Retiree dis-saving becomes revenue for robot firms. 
     
    Limit: Once assets are
    spent, demand falls. Dis-saving also pushes real rates up unless central banks
    suppress them.
     
    C. Foreigners in Growing Populations 
    Germany/Japan model: Export 5-8% of GDP yearly. Sell
    cars, robots, drugs to India, Nigeria, Indonesia. 
     
    AI/robot twist:
    Humanoids make re-shoring cheap. 10 engineers + 200 bots can run a factory.
    “Local costs, global revenue” accelerates. 
     
    Limit: Not everyone can
    run a surplus. If all aging countries export to India, India tariffs it.
    Currency wars follow.
     
    D. High-Skill Workers Who Manage the
    Machines 
    AI kills mid-skill jobs but raises pay for those who
    direct machines. Japan 1995-2020: total jobs -10%, IT jobs +40%, healthcare
    +60%. One human + 10 bots can run a restaurant. That human earns 10x. 
     
    Inequality rises, but consumption doesn’t zero out.
     
    E. Capital Owners via
    Dividends/Buybacks 
    If firms need fewer workers, profit share of GDP
    rises. US corporate profit/GDP: 5%→12% since 1990. Owners spend some. 
     
    Limit: Top 10% own 89%
    of US stocks. Their marginal propensity to consume is low. You can’t sell 10M
    cars to 1M billionaires.
     
    Bottom line:
    Buyers = state + retirees + foreigners + high-skill workers + capital owners.
    If they don’t add up to output, you get deflation until capacity closes.
     
  1. Why Humanoid Robots Make This Different
    From Past Automation
     
    Tractors and Excel created jobs elsewhere. Humanoids +
    AI may not, because:
     
    1.     Generality:
    A bot can be reprogrammed overnight: warehouse → nurse → barista. Past machines
    did one task. 
    2.     Cost
    curve: Target <$20k per bot = $1/hr capex. Humans cost
    $25-$40/hr. Cross-over is 2026-2030 for many jobs. 
    3.     Scale
    speed: No sleep, no visas. Copy-paste software. 
     
    Labour shortage flips to labour glut in <10 years
    in rich countries. The “who buys” question arrives before pensions adjust.
     
  2. How Do Countries Repay World Bank/IMF
    Loans When the Tax Base Shrinks?
     
    External USD debt has only 4 exits:
     
    1.     Export
    surplus: Earn USD selling robots/drugs/IP. Needs
    world-beating firms. 
    2.     Asset
    sales/FDI: Sell ports, land, companies for USD. Political
    backlash. 
    3.     Austerity:
    Cut spending until imports < exports. Greece 2010-2018. Young emigrate. “Few
    people take responsibility” because others left. 
    4.     Restructure/default:
    Haircut or forgiveness. HIPC wiped $76B for 37 nations. 
     
    Why few end up responsible:
    In degrowth, tax base narrows. Italy: 13% of taxpayers pay 60% of income tax.
    If top 10% + corporates pay, and they leave, debt is unpayable. IMF programs
    demand export growth + broader tax base for this reason.
     
  3. Three Futures
    Path Who Buys Debt Politics
    1.     Techno-Abundance:
    State taxes robots/capital, funds UBI/services. Retirees spend.  Inflated away slowly  Stable if redistribution accepted
    2.     Neo-Feudalism:
    Only capital owners + exporters. Domestic demand dies            Defaults/austerity       Unstable,
    emigration, unrest
    3.     Managed
    Degrowth: Shorter work week, wealth caps, public AI. Less
    consumption needed   Jubilee/restructure      Needs values shift
    Japan/EU = Path 1 so far. Greece = Path 2 briefly. No
    one has done Path 3.
     
  4. Can Corporates Profit for 20 Years in
    Global Degrowth? Yes, If…
     
  5. Sell to aging: Drugs, automation, care. 
  6. Sell abroad: >50% revenue from growing
    countries. 
  7. Need few workers: Software margins, robot
    factories. 
  8. Return cash: Buybacks so EPS grows as shares
    shrink. 
  9. State recycles profits: Taxes fund
    customers. 
     
    Most firms fail #2-#5. They shrink or die. That’s why
    index returns are flat in degrowth, but 15-20% of stocks compound. Dispersion,
    not a bull market.
     
  10. The Uncomfortable Answer
     
    Production = Income = Expenditure.
    If machines produce and owners get the income, humans need a claim on that
    income to create expenditure. The claim can be a wage, dividend, pension, UBI,
    or ownership. 
     
    No claim = no buyer. 
     
    AI + humanoid robots give us the tech for abundance.
    Degrowth forces us to decide who gets the income. The market won’t decide — it
    optimizes efficiency, not fairness. “Efficient” may mean 10% work, 90% don’t,
    unless we rewrite the rules on taxes, ownership, and distribution. 
     
    That’s why “who buys when jobs die” is the central
    economic question of the next 20 years.

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