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Dave Talks Global Politics Podcast

Podcast de Dave Talks Global Politics

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Dave Talks Global Politics is your no-nonsense, straight-talking guide to the biggest shift in global power since the Cold War: the rise of BRICS and the emerging multipolar world. Each episode cuts through the spin to break down trade reroutes, sanction blowbacks, gold hoarding, de-dollarization, and how Western policies keep handing advantages to the Global South — all in plain English, with dry humour and zero fluff. We explore why more countries are queuing up to join BRICS, what it means for energy prices, supply chains, and the dollar’s future, plus the quiet but profound ways the world order is changing. Short, sharp, and fact-based episodes that keep you ahead of the curve — no filler, just signal. New episodes drop regularly. Subscribe now so you don’t miss what’s coming next. Watch the full video show here: https://www.youtube.com/@dave-talks-politics wgowbrics.substack.com

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175 episodios

episode China’s Gold Holdings – How Much, Where It Came From, and the Long-Term Strategy artwork

China’s Gold Holdings – How Much, Where It Came From, and the Long-Term Strategy

China’s Gold Holdings – How Much, Where It Came From, and the Long-Term Strategy 1. How Much Gold China Actually Holds * Officially, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) reports around 2,262 tonnes of gold reserves as of early 2026. * Independent analysts and gold industry experts widely believe the true figure is significantly higher — likely between 3,500 and 4,500 tonnes or more, due to years of discreet accumulation through state channels. * China is the world’s largest gold producer and has been one of the biggest buyers on the global market for over a decade. * The gap between official and estimated holdings reflects deliberate opacity, a common practice for major central banks during strategic build-ups. * Team, even using the conservative official number, China already sits among the top global holders; the real number makes it a heavyweight. 2. Where China Gets Its Gold * Domestic mining is the foundation — China has been the world’s top gold producer for many years, extracting hundreds of tonnes annually from its own mines. * Large-scale imports through Hong Kong and other channels have been a major source, often routed discreetly to avoid market disruption. * The central bank and state entities have conducted steady, low-profile purchases on the international market, including through London and other hubs. * Some gold also flows through state-backed refiners and the Shanghai Gold Exchange, which has grown into a major global pricing centre. * My take: China doesn’t rely on any single source — it combines domestic production, strategic imports, and market buying to build reserves steadily and quietly. 3. The Recent Acceleration in Buying * Since 2019 China has been on a clear gold-buying spree, with the PBoC and other state actors adding hundreds of tonnes in recent years. * This pace has increased notably amid US-China tensions, the Iran war energy shocks, and broader de-dollarisation efforts. * Gold is being accumulated not just by the central bank but through commercial banks and sovereign wealth channels as well. * The buying has been methodical — avoiding sharp price spikes while steadily increasing holdings. * Team, this isn’t panic buying; it’s a long-planned strategic accumulation. 4. China’s Long-Term Gold Strategy * Gold serves as a hedge against the US dollar and a tool for gradual de-dollarisation of reserves. * It supports the internationalisation of the renminbi by providing a hard asset backing in a multipolar financial world. * In a crisis or sanctions scenario, large gold reserves offer a neutral, universally accepted store of value that can’t be frozen like dollar assets. * Beijing also wants to strengthen the Shanghai Gold Exchange as a global pricing benchmark to reduce reliance on London and New York. * My take: China is treating gold as a strategic national asset, not just a financial one — part of a broader move toward greater financial sovereignty. 5. Forward Realism – What This Means Going Forward * China will almost certainly continue adding to its gold reserves quietly and steadily for the foreseeable future. * This build-up strengthens its position in any future monetary or sanctions confrontation with the West. * For the global gold market, sustained Chinese demand provides a structural floor under prices and influences mining and investment decisions worldwide. * In the broader US-China competition, gold is one of the few assets where China can reduce vulnerability without triggering immediate retaliation. * Forward realism: Gold is a patient man’s game. China is playing it very well — accumulating quietly while the West debates and diversifies. Over the next decade this growing reserve will give Beijing real optionality and bargaining power in an increasingly fragmented global financial system. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit wgowbrics.substack.com [https://wgowbrics.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

25 de may de 2026 - 9 min
episode China’s One-Child Policy – What It Was, Why It Happened, Why It Ended, and the Lasting Impacts artwork

China’s One-Child Policy – What It Was, Why It Happened, Why It Ended, and the Lasting Impacts

China’s One-Child Policy – What It Was, Why It Happened, Why It Ended, and the Lasting Impacts 1. What the One-Child Policy Actually Was * Launched in 1979 and strictly enforced from 1980, the policy limited most urban couples to a single child, with rural families and ethnic minorities often allowed exceptions. * Enforcement included heavy fines, job loss threats, forced abortions, and sterilisation campaigns in some regions, especially during the 1980s and 1990s. * It created the “4-2-1” family structure: one child responsible for two parents and four grandparents. * The policy applied unevenly — urban Han Chinese faced the strictest rules, while some rural and minority families could have two. * Team, this was one of the largest social engineering experiments in human history, affecting hundreds of millions of families over three decades. 2. Why China Implemented the Policy * After the chaotic Mao era and a post-1949 baby boom, leaders feared unchecked population growth would overwhelm resources, food supplies, and economic development. * Deng Xiaoping’s government saw rapid population control as essential to the “Four Modernisations” and lifting China out of poverty. * Officials projected that without drastic action, China’s population could hit 1.5–2 billion by 2050, making modernisation impossible. * The policy was sold as a temporary emergency measure to buy time for economic reform. * My take: In the late 1970s it was viewed as a harsh but necessary trade-off to secure long-term national strength. 3. Why China Eventually Changed Course * By the 2010s the policy had succeeded too well — birth rates collapsed, the workforce began shrinking, and the population started ageing rapidly. * Severe gender imbalance emerged (preference for boys led to millions of missing females through sex-selective abortions). * The “demographic dividend” that powered China’s boom turned into a demographic tax: fewer workers supporting more retirees. * Economic slowdown risks and pension system strain became obvious, prompting the shift to a two-child policy in 2015 and a three-child policy in 2021. * Team, the leadership realised the cure had become worse than the disease. 4. What the Policy Is Now in 2026 * China now officially encourages up to three children per couple, with various local incentives including cash subsidies, extended maternity/paternity leave, housing support, and education benefits. * Some cities offer even stronger pro-natalist measures, but birth rates remain stubbornly low due to high living costs, work culture, and changing attitudes among young people. * The government has moved from punishment to encouragement, but the legacy of decades of small families is hard to reverse quickly. * My take: The shift from coercion to incentives shows how dramatically demographic reality has changed the Party’s priorities. 5. Forward Realism – The Lasting Impacts * Positive short-term: The policy helped fuel China’s economic miracle by creating a large, low-dependency working-age population for decades. * Negative long-term: China now faces one of the fastest-ageing societies in history, a shrinking labour force, and enormous pressure on pensions and healthcare. * Gender imbalance and the “little emperor” generation have created social and economic challenges that will persist for decades. * The policy accelerated urbanisation and female workforce participation but at the cost of traditional family structures. * Forward realism: China’s leaders made a brutal but deliberate choice in the 1980s that delivered growth when it was most needed. Today the bill is coming due, and no amount of subsidies can instantly fix decades of suppressed births. This demographic overhang will shape China’s rise — and its vulnerabilities — for the rest of the 21st century. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit wgowbrics.substack.com [https://wgowbrics.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

25 de may de 2026 - 11 min
episode China’s Silver Strategy – The Often Overlooked Precious Metal Play artwork

China’s Silver Strategy – The Often Overlooked Precious Metal Play

China’s Silver Strategy – The Often Overlooked Precious Metal Play 1. How Much Silver China Holds * Unlike gold, China does not publish official silver reserve figures, which makes exact numbers opaque by design. * Estimates from industry analysts and trade data suggest China holds very substantial physical silver stocks — likely in the range of 8,000 to 15,000 tonnes or more in state and commercial hands combined. * China is both the world’s largest silver miner (producing around 3,000–3,600 tonnes per year) and one of the largest consumers, driven by its massive electronics, solar, and EV industries. * The government and state entities have been quietly accumulating physical silver for years, often through the Shanghai Futures Exchange and direct imports. * Team, silver is treated differently from gold — more industrial, but still strategically important. 2. Where China Gets Its Silver * Domestic production is the backbone — China leads global mine output, with major mines in provinces like Inner Mongolia, Yunnan, and Jiangxi. * Significant imports come from Australia, Mexico, Peru, and recycled sources, often refined domestically. * State-backed entities and major refiners maintain large above-ground stocks to ensure supply security for strategic industries. * China has also been a net importer of silver in recent years to feed its solar panel and electronics manufacturing boom. * My take: China doesn’t just mine silver — it controls a large part of the global supply chain from mine to refined product. 3. Why Silver Matters to China’s Strategy * Silver has unique industrial properties (best electrical conductor, excellent in solar panels and electronics) that are critical for China’s “new energy” and high-tech goals. * It serves as a monetary complement to gold — a more affordable store of value and hedge against currency debasement. * In a potential crisis or sanctions scenario, silver’s industrial and monetary dual role gives Beijing flexibility that gold alone cannot provide. * Beijing sees silver as part of broader resource security, especially as the world electrifies and demands more solar and EV components. * Team, while gold gets the headlines, silver is the quiet workhorse in China’s strategic metals portfolio. 4. China’s Long-Term Silver Strategy * Secure domestic supply and refining capacity to reduce reliance on foreign sources. * Build strategic stockpiles to buffer against price volatility and supply disruptions. * Use its dominant position in solar and electronics to influence global silver demand and pricing. * Gradually increase monetary holdings alongside gold as part of de-dollarisation and reserve diversification. * Invest in recycling technology and new mining projects to maintain leadership as global silver demand grows with the green transition. * My take: China is playing a patient, integrated game — treating silver as both an industrial necessity and a financial asset. 5. Forward Realism – What This Means * China’s silver strategy gives it a structural edge in the green energy transition and high-tech manufacturing. * As global silver demand rises (especially for solar), China’s production and stockpiling position it to benefit from higher prices and supply leverage. * For the West, heavy dependence on Chinese refining and components creates a vulnerability in the silver supply chain. * In the broader US-China competition, silver is another area where China is building resilience and optionality. * Forward realism: While gold is the classic monetary metal, silver is the strategic industrial metal of the 21st century. China understands this and is positioning itself accordingly. Expect continued quiet accumulation and supply chain control — it’s a long game that aligns perfectly with China’s resource security and technological ambitions. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit wgowbrics.substack.com [https://wgowbrics.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

25 de may de 2026 - 14 min
episode The Triffin Dilemma Explained Simply – Why the Reserve Currency Country Must Run Big Trade Deficits (and What That Really Means for Debt) artwork

The Triffin Dilemma Explained Simply – Why the Reserve Currency Country Must Run Big Trade Deficits (and What That Really Means for Debt)

Welcome back, team! In this episode of Dave Talks Politics, hi, I’m Dave, and I’ll be talking politics. Today, team, let’s talk about: The Triffin Dilemma Explained Simply – Why the Reserve Currency Country Must Run Big Trade Deficits (and What That Really Means for Debt) 1. The Core Idea in Plain English * If your currency (like the US dollar today) is the world’s main reserve currency, the rest of the world needs a steady supply of it. * They need dollars to: * Hold as safe savings (reserves). * Use for international trade (oil, commodities, contracts). * Park money in safe assets (US Treasuries). * The only practical way to get those dollars into foreign hands is for the US to buy more from the world than it sells — that is, run a big trade deficit. * Foreign countries earn dollars by exporting goods and services to America. Those dollars then circulate globally as the world’s money. * Team, this is not a bug. It is the basic mechanics of being the world’s reserve currency. You have to be the world’s biggest customer to keep supplying the world with your currency. 2. Why This Leads to Ever-Increasing Government Debt * When the US runs a big trade deficit, it is effectively borrowing from the rest of the world to pay for all those imports. * Foreign central banks and investors take the dollars they earn and often buy US Treasury bonds (government debt) because they are safe, liquid, and pay interest. * This recycling of dollars back into US debt allows the American government to run budget deficits (spend more than it taxes) at relatively low interest rates — the famous “exorbitant privilege.” * So yes — persistent trade deficits do tend to go hand-in-hand with rising government debt. The world finances America’s consumption and government spending by buying Treasuries. * My take: This system lets the US live beyond its means for decades, but it also creates a slow-building vulnerability. Too much debt and too many dollars abroad can eventually erode confidence in the currency. 3. The Triffin Dilemma – The Built-In Contradiction * Belgian economist Robert Triffin pointed this out in the 1960s: A country cannot simultaneously: * Run the world’s reserve currency (which requires supplying lots of it through deficits), and * Maintain long-term confidence in that currency (which requires discipline and not running endless deficits). * If the US stops running deficits, the world runs short of dollars → global trade and growth slow down. * If the US keeps running big deficits, confidence in the dollar eventually erodes → inflation, higher interest rates, or even a shift away from the dollar. * This is the dilemma China is wisely avoiding. China runs huge surpluses and does not want the burden of being the main reserve issuer. 4. What This Means for China and the Future * China is happy to increase the yuan’s role gradually (more trade settlement in yuan, more gold reserves, more use in BRICS and Belt and Road deals), but it has no desire to run the massive deficits required for full reserve currency status. * This is why Beijing pushes for a more multipolar system — a diversified basket where the yuan has real weight, but the dollar remains important. * For everyday Americans, the system has delivered cheap imports and low borrowing costs, but it also means higher national debt and vulnerability if confidence ever cracks. * My take: The Triffin Dilemma explains why China is not rushing to replace the dollar. Being the world’s banker sounds great until you realise it requires constantly spending more than you earn. China prefers to keep its export machine running and its currency under control. 5. Forward Realism – The Long Game * The dollar’s dominance will erode slowly as the world diversifies, but it won’t disappear overnight. * China will keep internationalising the yuan on its own terms — enough to reduce vulnerability, not enough to take on the full Triffin burdens. * For the US, the choice is clear: either accept higher deficits and debt as the price of reserve status, or move toward a more balanced economy (harder politically). * In great-power competition, the country that manages its currency and deficits wisely holds a lasting edge. * Forward realism: Running big trade deficits is the price America pays for dollar dominance. It funds cheap imports and low interest rates, but it also builds up debt that future generations will carry. China sees this trap clearly and is avoiding it. That strategic patience may be one of Beijing’s biggest long-term advantages. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit wgowbrics.substack.com [https://wgowbrics.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

22 de may de 2026 - 15 min
episode The AI Arms Race – Why China Is Positioned to Win Against America’s Big 4 Hyperscalers artwork

The AI Arms Race – Why China Is Positioned to Win Against America’s Big 4 Hyperscalers

**Why This Show Matters to You** This race will decide who leads the 21st century in military power, economic dominance, and technological control. If China wins, everyday Westerners face higher costs, fewer high-paying jobs, reduced innovation, and strategic subordination to a system that prioritises state control over individual freedom. Your future prosperity and security are on the line. **1. The Scale of the US Big 4 Investment** - Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet/Google, and Meta are pouring an astonishing **$600–725 billion** into AI infrastructure in 2026 alone, with roughly 70–75% tied directly to chips, servers, data centers, and power. - This is private-sector muscle at its finest — deep capital markets, innovation speed, and intense internal competition driving breakthroughs in models and hardware. - Amazon leads with heavy AWS/data center bets, Google is ramping TPUs and clusters aggressively, Meta is all-in on custom silicon and multi-gigawatt sites, and Microsoft is pushing Azure/OpenAI hard despite power bottlenecks. - These four (plus enablers like Nvidia) represent America’s best shot at maintaining frontier leadership through market-driven dynamism. - To fund this runaway capital expenditure, the Big 4 have launched a global borrowing spree, tapping foreign debt markets at unprecedented scale. Alphabet had no foreign debt until last year but has now sold the equivalent of more than $40 billion in overseas bonds in euros, Swiss francs, British pounds, and Canadian dollars. Amazon recently raised €14.5 billion in its largest Eurobond sale and SFr2.8 billion in Swiss francs. - Team, the sheer dollar volume is breathtaking — no other country or bloc comes close in raw private investment firepower. **2. China’s State-Coordinated Counter-Approach** - China’s top AI firms are projected to invest around **$70 billion+** in data centers and related infrastructure this year, but this number understates the full picture because it is backed by massive state-directed power buildout, subsidies, and national planning. - Beijing’s model is centralised and relentless — rapid deployment of solar, nuclear, and coal capacity to feed AI clusters, with less regard for short-term profitability or environmental optics. - Advantages include speed of construction, ability to override local resistance, and coordinated allocation of resources across the entire supply chain. - While lagging on the absolute cutting edge of chips due to US export controls, China is closing gaps fast through domestic substitution and creative workarounds. - My take: This is not a fair fight between equals — it is private capital and innovation versus a state that can mobilise resources at national scale without quarterly earnings pressure. **3. Why China Is Positioned to Win This Race** - **Regulation**: China faces far fewer constraints — no lengthy environmental reviews, activist lawsuits, or NIMBY opposition that slow US data center builds for years. Beijing can approve and build at a pace America can only dream of. - **Capital Shocks and Allocation**: US hyperscalers are vulnerable to market volatility, interest rate hikes, and investor pullbacks. China’s state-backed system can sustain massive losses and long-term bets without panic selling or boardroom revolts. - **Power Infrastructure**: China is adding electricity generation capacity at an astonishing rate, prioritising AI needs over other sectors. The US is struggling with grid bottlenecks, permitting delays, and local resistance to new power plants. - **Talent and Focus**: China’s ability to direct top engineers and resources toward national priorities, combined with less brain drain, gives it an edge in scaling applications and deployment. - **Strategic Patience**: Beijing plays the long game — accepting short-term inefficiencies for long-term dominance in the foundational technology of the century. - Team, the structural advantages are stacking up for China in a race where speed, scale, and state coordination often beat pure market innovation. **4. Why This Race Is Existentially Critical** - AI is not just the next big industry — it is the foundational technology that will determine military superiority, economic dominance, scientific progress, and narrative control for the rest of the 21st century. - The winner will set global standards, control key chokepoints in data and compute, and shape everything from autonomous weapons to economic productivity. - Losing the AI race would leave the US and its allies permanently behind in the most important technological domain since the internet itself. - This is not hype — it is the decisive contest of our era, with implications for national security, jobs, and global influence that dwarf previous technological races. - My take: If China pulls ahead decisively, the balance of power shifts in ways that will be very difficult to reverse. This is why both sides are treating it as an arms race with existential stakes. **5. Forward Realism – The Likely Outcome** - China’s model — state direction, massive power buildout, and tolerance for inefficiency — gives it a strong structural edge in scaling deployment and applications over the next 5–10 years. - The US Big 4 will maintain leadership in frontier models and innovation for some time due to talent and capital market depth, but power and regulatory constraints will bite hard. - If China wins this race — and current trends in deployment speed, energy buildout, and regulatory freedom strongly suggest it will — the consequences for everyday Westerners will be profound and painful. We would become strategically subordinate to a Communist system that controls the foundational technology of the age. - Imagine higher costs for everything as Chinese AI-driven efficiencies dominate global markets. Fewer high-paying tech jobs as innovation leadership shifts east. Reduced national security as China sets standards for autonomous systems, cyber tools, and economic algorithms. Slower productivity growth, stagnant wages, and a gradual erosion of living standards as the West plays catch-up in a world designed on Beijing’s terms. - Everyday life would feel the squeeze: more expensive goods, less economic opportunity, diminished global influence, and the quiet realisation that critical decisions affecting your future are increasingly made in Beijing rather than Silicon Valley or Washington. - The race will be decided by who better solves the energy bottleneck and who can sustain investment through economic and geopolitical shocks. - America must respond with urgent deregulation, grid modernisation, and strategic industrial policy — or risk ceding the future to a more coordinated adversary. - Forward realism: China is built for this kind of race. The US private sector is incredibly innovative, but it operates in a system that often ties its own hands with regulation and short-term thinking. This contest will define the next decade of global power. If China wins the AI race, it wins the century — and everyday Westerners pay the price through diminished prosperity, security, and freedom. The window for America to respond decisively is narrowing fast — and the stakes could not be higher. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit wgowbrics.substack.com [https://wgowbrics.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

20 de may de 2026 - 28 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
Me encanta la app, concentra los mejores podcast y bueno ya era ora de pagarles a todos estos creadores de contenido

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