Highlights
- China achieved industrial supremacy not through mining but by controlling processing, refining, and manufacturing—the true chokepoints where pricing power lives.
- The U.S. didn't lose the race for strategic materials—it deliberately opted out through decades of outsourcing, creating vulnerabilities in refining and industrial capacity.
- The real contest isn't ideological but industrial: who rebuilds faster will control future capital accumulation, with China holding scale and the West holding capital and alliances.
We are no longer in a world defined by globalization. As Rare Earth Exchanges first termed, we moved into the Great Powers Era 2.0—a system of competing blocs racing to secure energy, minerals, and industrial dominance. Amanda van Dyke’s thesis (opens in a new tab) lands squarely in this reality: today’s conflicts are not isolated—they are embedded in a deeper struggle over inputs of production. In plain terms, the stellar analyst argues China has leveraged discounted energy and geopolitical distractions to strengthen its industrial base while the U.S. looks elsewhere. It’s a provocative—and partially correct—diagnosis.
The Mineral Truth: Where Van Dyke Is Dead Right
At the core, her mineral thesis holds. China anticipated this shift decades ago. It built dominance not in mining—but in processing, refining, and magnet manufacturing, the true chokepoints of the modern economy. This is where pricing power lives.
As Amanda van Dyke correctly highlights midway through her argument, cheap inputs matter. Discounted oil, subsidized power, and underpriced concentrates cascade through the industrial stack, compounding into lower costs across steel, chemicals, batteries, and advanced manufacturing.
This is not theory—it is industrial math. And the West missed it.
Her framing of “Mercantilism 2.0” also resonates. This is not free trade. It is state-backed competition for control over supply chains, cost structures, and strategic materials.
Is Anything Inevitable?
Are the popular narratives out there too dependent on inevitability?
China is not an untouchable system—it is a highly leveraged, tightly controlled economy under strain.
- Overproduction across steel, EVs, solar, and batteries is colliding with weakening global demand
- Capital controls and top-down rigidity are increasing, not loosening, limiting private sector dynamism (and causing a lot of pent-up resentment and anger in business classes)
- Energy dependence remains acute—China imports the majority of its oil and gas
- Input dependence persists—ores and concentrates still flow from abroad
This is the paradox: China dominates processing—but does not fully control the upstream lifelines it depends on.
Does Van Dyke’s framing of proxy wars as coordinated distraction stretch the evidence? Alignment of interests is real—but orchestration is far harder to prove. It could be the case, but we are just not so certain.
The Western Mirror: A Story of Strategic Drift
The deeper truth is uncomfortable.
The U.S. did not simply “lose” this race—it outright opted out. Decades of outsourcing based on a profitable (at the time) thesis of globalization, regulatory friction, and underinvestment hollowed out refining and industrial capacity.
China executed. The West deferred.
Investor Takeaway: The Real Contest Is Industrial Speed
This is not about narratives. It is about who rebuilds faster.
China holds scale and midstream dominance—for now.
The West holds capital, alliances, and technological depth, not to mention more cultural impetus for disruption.
Perhaps one decisive variable is time.
This is not a war of ideology or headlines.
It is a war of inputs, infrastructure, and execution under pressure—in a bid to control the accumulation of capital in the future.
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