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Transcript of Alex Krainer: Declining Europe vs Rising BRICS

Read the full transcript of a conversation between host Professor Glenn Diesen and market analyst Alex Krainer on “Declining Europe vs Rising BRICS”, Apr 9, 2025.

The interview starts here:

Introduction and Economic Upheaval

GLENN DIESEN: Hi everyone and welcome. I am joined today by Alex Krainer, market analyst, former hedge fund manager and commentator on both political and economic events. And I guess these days the economic events are very closely intertwined with politics. And as the Chinese would say, we’re living in interesting times as the world is definitely changing very rapidly from week to week. How have you been?

ALEX KRAINER: Thank you for having me, Glenn. Greetings to everyone out there. I’ve been fine. It’s been extremely busy. I’m not sure that I’m being able to keep track of events and what’s happening. So trying to not get overwhelmed and trying to keep a sense of perspective as we best can.

The Tariff Question and Global Economic Shifts

GLENN DIESEN: Well, I was thinking we should maybe start with the big story, which is the economic upheaval. I was curious about your views on these tariffs because you can really have two competing perspectives. From my perspective, I think I can appreciate that the US can’t continue along the current status quo. Their debt is piling up, they’re de-industrializing and their technological competitiveness is reducing. So I don’t really blame Donald Trump for seeking another path given that the US appears to be sinking.

I’m a fan of the American system of the 19th century. I can appreciate that tariffs can give competitive advantage to domestic industries. It’s a good idea to re-industrialize. And indeed, even in terms of negotiations, the EU seems to have folded and offering now 0 for 0 tariffs. So maybe it’s doing the right thing.

On the other hand, I do not see the industrial capacity in the United States capable of replacing exports in the foreseeable future. So these huge tariffs, which aren’t selective, fuel a lot of uncertainty, disrupt the supply chains, and inhibit further investments. How can I get your take on this, the whole tariffs, how do you see the global economy moving? Because I can’t really make up my mind yet about this issue.

Strategic Calculations or Impulsive Actions?

ALEX KRAINER: I think I have to go out on a limb, Glenn, because I have a hard time interpreting the events. Much of it doesn’t seem to make sense. And then you’re taken back to the question of are the people in the administration sophisticated, have they thought this through or are they just taking these impulsive actions and saying, “okay, well what the hell, we’ll see what happens and maybe it all works out.”

This is actually a very important question because if you start from the premise that they’re sophisticated and that they thought things through, then you can make sense out of it, and you can try to find an interpretation that perhaps leads to a positive outcome for the United States. If they’re not – if they’re making it up as they go along, then it can go anywhere. So it’s extremely difficult to try to interpret what they’re doing or where it might lead us.

I think that the situation as it was was very unsustainable. It still is. And so Trump’s moves, you know, we cannot blame him for the fallout. I believe that the dry tinder for this crisis has been piling up for a very, very long time. And everybody knew that it was unsustainable. And whatever is unsustainable means that at some point it has to collapse. And so perhaps they decided to rip off the band-aids, so to speak, and to start resetting the world on a different path.

Europe as the Main Target

We’ve seen that the reactions from Europe have been nothing short of hysterical. And we can see why the whole European setup has been based on exporting their manufacturing to the United States and the United Kingdom, which has been absorbing the bulk of Europe’s exports. And then much of these exports were coming straight from China, where many European manufacturers have meanwhile transferred much of their productive capacities in search of cheaper energy and cheaper labor and less restrictive bureaucratic environment.

Trump’s tariff imposed on Europe basically demolished this whole relationship that Europe has been basing itself on. And so I’ll shift our focus a little bit to Europe, because it seems to me that from whatever angle I look at the situation, it seems to me that Europe is the main recipient of blows from the Trump administration.

The Yemen Conflict and Its Impact on Europe

I even thought about the war going on in Yemen now, because when the Trump administration launched this war on 15th of March, the Operation Rough Rider – I don’t know what happened to Operation Prosperity Guardian, but apparently it just kind of withered, replaced by now Operation Rough Rider. They have now accelerated bombing of Yemen, which is achieving nothing. And it was understood by the American military brass that it was unlikely to achieve anything much. So why launch it in the first place?

I couldn’t understand this, but then I watched a panel discussion on Saturday with Larry Wilkerson, Ambassador Chas Freeman, and Mohammad Marandi on Nima’s Dialogue Works.

GLENN DIESEN: Yeah, yeah, I think I saw.

ALEX KRAINER: And I thought it was extremely interesting what Col. Larry Wilkerson was saying about the tabletop exercise that they held about the Red Sea, about the maritime traffic to the Red Sea. Now, this was some years ago, and it was a very major exercise that they were doing because it was sponsored by CENTCOM and AFRICOM and the Pentagon and NSA and a whole bunch of other American and European National Security Organizations. It was represented by Europeans as much as the Americans. So this was not just a small thing, it was a very important exercise.

And they concluded that this was one of the most strategic trade routes in the world that then CENTCOM tagged as “global hub of competitiveness,” because they estimate 55 to 60% of all trade in the world passing through the Red Sea.