To understand the present, learn from the past
Though times change, the essence of human experience remains. By tracing the path of the past, we find meaning in the present and glimpse the direction of what is to come
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
AI and Consciousness
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Section II: The Norway Case — Governing Sudden Wealth Without Losing Balance
The Norway case shows how disciplined governance turned oil wealth into lasting prosperity, offering vital lessons for Vietnam’s long-term development.
To understand how industrial policy succeeds in practice, it is useful to study moments of sudden opportunity. Norway offers a rare example of a country that discovered extraordinary wealth and responded not with urgency, but with restraint.
Before oil, Norway was a small, open economy built on shipping, fishing, hydropower, and manufacturing. When large petroleum discoveries were confirmed in the North Sea at the end of the 1960s, the country effectively won a national jackpot. Yet Norwegian leaders understood early that the greatest danger was not scarcity, but excess. The real challenge would not be extracting oil, but governing wealth.
From the outset, Norway established a simple but decisive principle:
Petroleum resources belonged to the nation as a whole.
This consensus was formed early, before large revenues arrived and before political habits hardened. Rules were written before pressure appeared. That sequencing proved decisive.
Rather than allowing oil income to flow directly into the domestic economy, Norway designed institutions to slow money down. The state imposed high but predictable taxes and retained direct ownership stakes in petroleum fields, ensuring national value capture while leaving day-to-day operations to professional firms. Over time, this model took shape through commercially run entities such as Equinor, combined with clear regulatory oversight and financial discipline.
The most important decision, however, was what not to do. Oil revenue was not treated as ordinary income. Instead, it was saved abroad, invested globally, and introduced into the domestic economy only gradually through strict fiscal rules. This prevented overheating, protected non-oil industries, and ensured that future generations would benefit from a finite resource. Norway chose patience over popularity.
Equally important was the separation of ownership from emotion. The state owned strategically, but governed calmly. Politicians set long-term boundaries rather than issuing operational instructions. Professional management, transparency, and accountability were not slogans, but structural requirements. This insulation reduced corruption, limited short-termism, and forced competence.
Venezuela’s Oil Trap
The contrast with oil-rich countries such as Venezuela is instructive. There, oil income became a shortcut to political power. Spending accelerated, institutions weakened, and savings mechanisms were repeatedly overridden. When prices fell, buffers were gone. Wealth arrived, but discipline did not.
Lessons for Vietnam’s long-term development.
Norway shows the importance of acting early, before money reshapes incentives. It shows the value of separating state ownership from political impulse. And it shows that extraordinary income should be treated as temporary leverage, not permanent entitlement. Save first. Invest carefully. Spend slowly.
In Taoist terms, Norway practiced wu wei in economic governance: acting without forcing, governing without overreaching, allowing well-designed systems to function without constant intervention.¹ Wealth was guided, not chased.
Final Thought
History does not warn loudly; it teaches quietly. Norway’s experience shows that sudden wealth is neither a blessing nor a curse, but a test of judgment. By choosing restraint over speed and institutions over impulse, Norway allowed time to work in its favor. The present often urges nations to spend, expand, and celebrate too quickly. Yet lasting prosperity comes from balance, responsibility, and patience. To understand the challenges Vietnam faces today, it must first learn how others governed abundance before it governed them.
Footnotes
¹ Wu wei (无为) is a core concept in Taoist philosophy, most closely associated with the Tao Te Ching. It does not mean “doing nothing,” but non-forcing or effortless action — setting wise structures early and allowing systems to operate in harmony rather than through constant control.
References
This article draws on publicly available sources and established literature on petroleum governance and economic development, including
- Norwegian government publications on oil policy, fiscal rules, and sovereign wealth management;
- Documentation on Equinor’s governance model;
- Comparative studies on the resource curse;
- Historical analyses of oil-rich economies such as Venezuela;
- and broader academic and policy research on industrial policy, long-term growth, and demographic transition.
This article is written by Dave Huynh, as part of an ongoing series on economic development and Vietnam’s future growth path. It is developed in collaboration with Amanda, an AI research and writing partner, who supports analysis, structure, and language refinement. All interpretations and conclusions remain the author’s own.
- Previous: Section I: What Vietnam Can Learn from National Industrial Policy
- Next: Section III: Japan and South Korea — Catch-Up Growth Under Discipline (not publish yet)
Sunday, February 8, 2026
Section I: What Vietnam Can Learn from National Industrial Policy
This article is written by Dave Huynh, as part of an ongoing series on economic development and Vietnam’s future growth path. It is developed in collaboration with Amanda, an AI research and writing partner, who supports analysis, structure, and language refinement. All interpretations and conclusions remain the author’s own.
Friday, February 6, 2026
Why Bitcoin Is Not “Digital Gold"
A Calm Look at Safe Havens, Risk, and the Nature of Value
For more than a decade, Bitcoin has been promoted as “digital gold.” The idea is simple and attractive. Like gold, Bitcoin is scarce. Like gold, it exists outside government control. And like gold, it is supposed to protect wealth when the world feels uncertain. Yet recent market behavior suggests this comparison is more poetry than reality. Over the past year, global uncertainty has increased. Geopolitical tensions have risen. Financial markets have become more nervous.Volatile rise followed by a sharp decline
Bitcoin fell roughly 28% over the past year, behaving like a risk asset during market stress.
Steady rise as a classic safe haven
Gold rose more than 70% over the same period, reflecting strong safe-haven demand.
References
¹ David Goldman, “No, but seriously: What’s going on with bitcoin?”, CNN, February 5, 2026. The article describes Bitcoin’s sharp decline during a period of rising fear, while gold prices surged, challenging the idea of Bitcoin as a safe-haven asset.
Saturday, January 31, 2026
“Sell America”: When Capital Begins to Doubt
A macro view of how global investors quietly re-price U.S. assets amid shifting geopolitics, rising debt, and changing trust.
For most of modern financial history, one rule seemed unbreakable: when the world felt unsafe, money flowed to the United States. Wars, crises, recessions, pandemics. Again and again, investors sought shelter in the US dollar, US government bonds, and American markets. The dollar was not just a currency. It was confidence itself.
Today, that reflex is changing.
Quietly, without panic or drama, capital is beginning to hesitate. Investors are no longer running automatically toward America. Instead, they are spreading out, reassessing, and asking questions that once felt unnecessary. In the language of markets, this shift has a name: “Sell America.” 1
“Sell America” does not mean abandoning the United States. It does not predict collapse. It describes something more subtle and more important: a change in trust. When investors sell America, they reduce their dependence on US assets and the US dollar, and increase exposure to gold, other currencies, and markets outside direct American control. It is not a political statement. It is a risk decision.
The reasons behind this shift are not hard to see. Recent years have brought rising geopolitical tensions, renewed trade threats, and a growing sense that economic tools are increasingly used as political weapons. When uncertainty comes from the very system that once provided stability, investors naturally begin to look for alternatives. The dollar, in such moments, stops acting as a universal safe haven and becomes one option among many.
The question of trust
One of the clearest signals of this doubt is the price of gold. Over the past year, gold has climbed to record levels, moving sharply higher as confidence in currencies weakened. Gold does not promise growth or income. It promises something else: independence from politics. When trust in rules, institutions, and predictability fades, gold quietly returns to its ancient role as a store of value. This is not driven only by private investors. Central banks themselves have been increasing their gold holdings, slowly reducing their reliance on the dollar system.
At the same time, the US dollar has weakened against a broad range of currencies, including the Norwegian krone. For investors outside the United States, this matters. A falling dollar reduces the value of US assets when measured in local currency terms. It also signals that holding dollars is no longer a one-way bet. Currency risk, once ignored, has returned to the conversation.
Yet “Sell America” has clear limits. The United States still hosts the deepest and most liquid financial markets in the world. There are few places capable of absorbing large global capital flows at short notice. Even countries that compete strategically with the US understand this reality. China, despite long-standing tensions, has never seriously attempted to dump its US assets. Doing so would damage its own reserves and destabilize the global financial system. Attacking the world’s reserve currency is not a victory. It is mutual harm.
The real consequence of “Sell America” is therefore not mass exit, but repricing. Investors begin to demand higher returns for holding US assets. Political risk is no longer ignored. Trust is no longer free. The dollar remains dominant, but it is no longer unquestioned. It moves from absolute certainty to conditional confidence.
Europe, the World, and America’s Debt: A Subtle Shift in Trust 2
“Sell America” is best understood not through individual investors, but through the broader relationship between U.S. public debt and its foreign creditors. With roughly $38 trillion in debt 3 and close to $1 trillion a year in interest payments, the United States is highly sensitive to long-term interest rates and global confidence. Foreign investors hold a significant share of this debt, with Japan as the largest creditor and Europe, including the Nordic countries, controlling a substantial portion of U.S. government bonds and financial assets.
This does not give Europe or other creditors a simple financial weapon. Most U.S. debt is held by private institutions, and any large-scale sell-off would damage creditors and destabilize global markets. The system is too interconnected for confrontation. Instead, what is taking place is quieter and more revealing. Over time, major creditors have begun to reduce their dependence on U.S. debt at the margin. China has halved its Treasury holdings over the past decade, Japan has slowed new purchases, and parts of Northern Europe have selectively stepped back.
These moves are modest in size but meaningful in signal. Pension funds and sovereign investors are built for stability, not speculation. When they begin to reassess even U.S. government bonds, it reflects not panic, but a measured re-pricing of trust. Political uncertainty and rising deficits are no longer ignored. They are calmly absorbed into returns.
This is the essence of “Sell America.” Capital is not fleeing the United States, but it is no longer offering automatic confidence. The dollar remains central, yet its privilege now carries conditions. Strength endures, but trust must be earned — and renewed.
The AI bubble?
This shift is unfolding at the same time as another source of unease: fears of an AI-driven stock market bubble. Artificial intelligence is a powerful and genuine technological force, but markets have a long history of confusing transformation with valuation. When excitement outruns earnings, corrections tend to follow. For investors, the combination of political uncertainty and valuation risk reinforces one simple lesson: concentration is dangerous.
In this environment, balance becomes a form of wisdom. Gold offers stability when confidence weakens. Stocks offer growth, but demand humility. Cash offers patience and flexibility, especially when held across more than one currency. None of these is sufficient alone. Together, they form resilience.
Final thought
From a Taoist perspective, this moment is not alarming. It is natural. Systems rise, mature, and invite correction. Extremes create their own counterweights. When certainty hardens into complacency, doubt quietly restores balance. The wise investor does not resist this movement. He adapts to it.
“Sell America” is not a call to fear the future. It is a reminder to respect it. Responsibility in investing does not mean predicting what comes next. It means preparing calmly for more than one path. In a world where trust shifts and cycles turn, balance is not weakness. It is strength.
References
- Cecilie Langum Becker, «Sell America» er tilbake, NRK.NO, 2026. Source ↩
- Tạp chí kinh tế, 3.800 tỷ đô la nợ, huyệt hiểm của Hoa Kỳ, RFI, 27/01/2026 - 14:57. Source ↩
- Doug Melville, With The U.S. Debt A Staggering $38 Trillion Dollars, Who Exactly Do We Owe?, Forbes, Jan 04, 2026, 11:14am EST. Source ↩
Monday, January 19, 2026
Money, Machines, and the Search for Balance
The Fed, the AI Boom, Gold, and How Investors Can Navigate a Fractured World
The global financial system is entering a period of quiet tension. The independence of the U.S. Federal Reserve is openly debated. Artificial intelligence fuels both genuine productivity gains and speculative excess. Geopolitical rivalries reshape trade and capital flows. And beneath the noise, central banks are steadily buying gold.
These developments are not separate events. They are connected signals from a system adjusting to stress.
The Federal Reserve and the Fragility of Trust
The independence of the U.S. Federal Reserve has long been a cornerstone of global financial stability. Investors trust that interest-rate decisions are based on inflation and employment, not election calendars. This trust matters because the U.S. dollar is the world’s primary reserve currency, used to price trade, settle debts, and store national wealth.
When that independence appears threatened, the reaction is rarely dramatic. Instead, institutions quietly hedge. Trust erodes gradually, not suddenly.
Artificial Intelligence: A Real Revolution with Bubble Dynamics
Artificial intelligence is transforming industries. Data centers, cloud infrastructure, memory chips, and advanced semiconductors are becoming the backbone of modern economies. Yet history shows that revolutionary technologies often attract too much capital, too quickly.
AI-related stocks behave like long-duration assets. Their value depends on profits far in the future. When interest rates rise or expectations soften, prices can fall sharply even if the technology itself continues to succeed. A bubble does not mean failure. It means mispricing.
Geopolitics and the Return of Monetary Realism
The era of frictionless globalization is fading. Sanctions, trade disputes, and industrial policy now influence capital flows. For many countries, reserves are no longer purely financial assets. They are strategic assets.
This realization has changed how central banks behave.
Gold, Silver, and the Silent Hedge
Over the past decade, China has steadily reduced its holdings of U.S. Treasury bonds while increasing its gold reserves. This shift is slow and deliberate. It is not an attack on the dollar. It is diversification.
Gold carries no counterparty risk. It cannot be frozen or printed. Silver, though more volatile and less central-bank focused, benefits from both monetary hedging and industrial demand linked to electrification and technology.
The rise in gold and silver prices reflects risk management, not fear of imminent dollar collapse. Reserve currencies decline over decades, sometimes centuries — as Spain’s silver-based dominance faded gradually after the 17th century.
Visual Metaphor: A System Rebalancing
What This Means for a U.S. Investor
For individual investors, this environment calls for balance, not prediction.
• Gold and silver can serve as insurance against systemic risk.3
•
Bitcoin, sometimes called digital gold, offers scarcity and portability but remains volatile and historically untested.
• AI and data-center stocks represent long-term transformation, but valuations require humility.
• Materials tied to technology — memory chips, storage, rare earths — sit at the intersection of innovation and geopolitics and demand careful position sizing.
The goal is resilience, not certainty.
A Quiet Closing Reflection
In Taoist thought, excess invites correction. Speed invites stillness. Confidence invites humility.
Our era leans strongly toward Yang — acceleration, intelligence, leverage. Gold, patience, and diversification represent Yin — memory, restraint, endurance. Wisdom lies not in rejecting progress, nor in worshiping it, but in holding both forces in balance.
In uncertain times, the task is not to predict the future — but to remain steady as it unfolds.
Footnotes
- China reducing U.S. Treasury holdings:
China’s holdings of U.S. Treasury securities and their long-term decline are documented in the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Treasury International Capital (TIC) data.
https://home.treasury.gov/data/treasury-international-capital-tic-system ↩ - China increasing official gold reserves:
World Gold Council reports show central banks as consistent net buyers of gold in recent years, reflecting diversification amid geopolitical risk.
https://www.gold.org/goldhub/research/gold-demand-trends ↩ - Gold and silver price increases amid geopolitical and monetary uncertainty: Gold and silver price movements are covered extensively by Reuters in the context of inflation,
interest rates, and central-bank demand.
https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/ ↩
Sunday, January 18, 2026
From Japan and South Korea to China’s Made in China 2025 — and Vietnam’s Next Development Leap
Notes & References
- Made in China 2025 was launched in 2015 to upgrade China’s manufacturing sector, reduce dependence on foreign technology, and build globally competitive industrial capabilities. Council on Foreign Relations.
- Made in China 2025 — assessment by 2025 . Analysis of achievements and remaining gaps across key sectors. Rhodium Group.
- China recorded a record trade surplus of around USD 1.2 trillion in 2025, reflecting strong exports despite tariffs and geopolitical pressure. Reuters.
- “Chưa giàu mà đã già” is a Vietnamese phrase describing the risk of a country aging before achieving prosperity, referring to declining fertility and the narrowing demographic window.
- Equinor illustrates the Nordic state-ownership model, where the Norwegian government is a majority shareholder while leaving day-to-day management to professional leadership. Equinor.
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