Burning Down the House: Carbon Politics, American Power, and the Almighty Dollar

The US has 330 million citizens, which is less than 5% of the world’s population. Yet its GDP footprint is around 25% of global GDP. How is that possible? While leading-edge technological innovation and a giant military undoubtedly help, what’s really been the secret sauce for the past 30 plus years is the global role of the dollar. The rest of the world needs a savings asset and the US provides it through massive debt issuance and the global role of the dollar in international trade. This has enabled the US to import vast quantities of TVs, Cars, Computers, and everything else you can think of, while paying for it all with digital IOU'S that bear 2% called Treasury bills. The problem with this model is that if you import everything you stop making your own things and you hollow out your industrial base. Both Biden and Trump saw this. Biden sought green re-industrialization through the IRA. Trump seeks re-industrialization through doubling down on the carbon-economy, which constitutes the growth model of GOP states in the US. If a Trump administration doubles down on carbon, the short term boost to growth through lower input prices plus deregulation will be huge. Possibly enough to propel a two-term administration. Climate denial can be profitable. But the rest of the world, China, Europe and East and South Asia, will continue to develop the green technologies needed to survive in the 21st century. The US will fall behind in this critical area as the countries involved in the green transition trade more intensely with each other. The knock-on effect will be that the global role of the dollar shrinks. First, because the issuer doesn’t like the side effects any more. Second, because in a post carbon world, who needs a currency that denominates and is backed by carbon assets that no one else uses any more? In short, the US’s addiction to carbon and the politics that it produces risks burning down the house. Meet our speaker and chair Mark Blyth is the William R. Rhodes ’57 Professor of International Economics and the Director of the Rhodes Centre for International Economics and Finance at the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University. He holds a joint appointment in the department of political science. He is the author many award-winning books including, Austerity: The History of a Dangerous Idea (New York: Oxford University Press 2015), Angrynomics (New York: Columbia University Press 2020), Diminishing Returns: The New Politics of Growth and Stagnation (Oxford University Press 2022), and forthcoming in 2025, Inflation: A Guide for Users and Losers. He writes about the politics of growth, distribution and decarbonization and why people continue to believe dubious economic ideas despite buckets of evidence to the contrary. Benjamin Braun is Assistant Professor in Political Economy, LSE European Institute More about this event The European Institute (@LSEEI) is a centre for research and graduate teaching on the processes of integration and fragmentation within Europe.

Does decarbonization still have a future?
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Does decarbonization still have a future?

Sarah Paine - Why Putin and Xi can't escape geography
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Sarah Paine - Why Putin and Xi can't escape geography

BREAKING: Trump’s Epstein problem returns with blockbuster testimony
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BREAKING: Trump’s Epstein problem returns with blockbuster testimony

Mark Blyth: Capitalism Is Crashing Again and Politics Isn’t Ready | Global Macro | Ep.94
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Mark Blyth: Capitalism Is Crashing Again and Politics Isn’t Ready | Global Macro | Ep.94

Mark Blyth - Global Trumpism and the Future of the Global Economy
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Mark Blyth - Global Trumpism and the Future of the Global Economy

Mark Blyth - A Brief History of How We Got Here and Why
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Mark Blyth - A Brief History of How We Got Here and Why

Can a Liberal Polity Survive the Politics of Grievance? - Jefferson Memorial Lecture - Mark Blyth
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Can a Liberal Polity Survive the Politics of Grievance? - Jefferson Memorial Lecture - Mark Blyth

Do Rich People CAUSE Populism? Interview with Mark Blyth | The Mindful Wealth Podcast
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Do Rich People CAUSE Populism? Interview with Mark Blyth | The Mindful Wealth Podcast

Mark Blyth Book Panel: Austerity: The History of a Dangerous Idea▬ April 23, 2013
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Mark Blyth Book Panel: Austerity: The History of a Dangerous Idea▬ April 23, 2013

Austerity and the Politics of Money
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Austerity and the Politics of Money

Ray Dalio on US Debt, AI Bubble, Bond Markets
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Ray Dalio on US Debt, AI Bubble, Bond Markets

Mark Blyth | Inflation - A Guide for Losers and Users
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Mark Blyth | Inflation - A Guide for Losers and Users

Political economist Mark Blyth: The old economic order is dead | Rapid Response
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Political economist Mark Blyth: The old economic order is dead | Rapid Response

Understanding: Currencies with Brown Prof. Mark Blyth
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Understanding: Currencies with Brown Prof. Mark Blyth

The Petrodollar Is Cracking: Varoufakis & Wolff on Empire, Iran and Capitalism's Crisis
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The Petrodollar Is Cracking: Varoufakis & Wolff on Empire, Iran and Capitalism's Crisis

Mark Blyth – Austerity: The History of a Dangerous Idea
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Mark Blyth – Austerity: The History of a Dangerous Idea

The establishment are making antisemitism WORSE | Norman Finkelstein
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The establishment are making antisemitism WORSE | Norman Finkelstein

"The Worst Economic Crisis" : The Consequences of Trump's Iran War
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"The Worst Economic Crisis" : The Consequences of Trump's Iran War

In Conversation with Mark Blyth: George Bernard Shaw - Theater, Economics and Social Justice
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In Conversation with Mark Blyth: George Bernard Shaw - Theater, Economics and Social Justice

Economist Mark Blyth and the future of the Eurozone (with slides)
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Economist Mark Blyth and the future of the Eurozone (with slides)