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Creative Destruction's Long Shadow: Population Decline, Overcapacity, and the Limits of Policy in America, Britain, and China How deindustrialization, demographic flight, and state-fueled gluts expose the uneven toll of economic progress—and why governments can cushion but rarely reverse it . In the quiet hollows of West Virginia, the shuttered coal mines stand as monuments to a once-thriving industry now reduced to echoes. Similar ghosts haunt the terraced streets of South Wales Valleys and the sprawling factory complexes of China's rustbelt provinces. Over the past four decades, these places—and many like them—have grappled with a familiar, unforgiving cycle: the collapse of dominant sectors, relentless out-migration of the young and skilled, populations aging into natural decline where deaths outpace births, and economies locked in stagnation. This is not mere misfortune but the visible hand of creative destruction at work—the relentless economic evolution that Joseph Sc...

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