This market will resolve "yes" if there is a Chinese military attack with the intention to invade Taiwan by the end of 2027.
This question is answered "No" if there is:
no military conflict between the two parties
a limited military conflict without triggering a major war
On the one hand, this time span approximately reaches the maximum forecast range (~<5 years), as Philip E. Tetlock in his book Superforecasting: the art and science of prediction. Moreover, 2027 is the year in which, as frequently reported, China wants to seek military capabilities to successfully invade Taiwan without saying that it will act accordingly.
"[...] Admiral John Aquilino, says China wants to finish modernising its armed forces by 2027. The timeline is shrinking, he told the Senate in March.
https://www.economist.com/china/2022/09/01/a-weak-china-may-be-more-warlike-than-a-strong-one
The year Davidson sees as the potential time horizon for a Chinese attack, 2027, is the centenary of the People’s Liberation Army. In November 2020, the Chinese Communist party said it wanted to “ensure that the 100-year military building goal is achieved by 2027”, called for faster military modernisation and reiterated the goal of making the Chinese military fit for networked, “intelligentised” warfare. Although those are stock phrases China has used before, the Pentagon calls 2027 a “new milestone”. “If realised, the PLA’s 2027 modernisation goals could provide Beijing with more credible military options in a Taiwan contingency,” it said in its annual report on the Chinese military last year. Some analysts doubt Davidson’s date. But one year on from his testimony, government and military officials in both Taipei and Washington say the window from now to 2027 is a genuine threat.
[...]
One person familiar with the administration’s assessment of the threat to Taiwan says there is general agreement that China is aiming to have developed the necessary capabilities to attack by 2027, but argues that is very distinct from the question of intent or action.https://www.ft.com/content/0850eb67-1700-47c0-9dbf-3395b4e905fd
People are also trading
@Gurkenglas https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/open-hidden-open-thread-4235/comment/223513107 :
Reportedly, the Chinese were taken off guard by the massive strike on Iran. Their conventional wisdom was that the US would at most try for the nuclear processing center again. Planners weren't prepared for the US moves. Now they have to deal with the fact that Iran's oil isn't flowing to China; it could (will?) disrupt their economy. And the Iran fiasco has proved that Chinese weapons systems, which they sold to Iran, can't stand up to US weapons. The old guard & the reformers are very concerned. And Xi may not make it to the 21st Party Congress in 2027. Even is Xi wins his political battles, he won't be able to move against Taiwan in the foreseeable future.
@CF6508 From the market description:
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This question is answered "No" if there is:
no military conflict between the two parties
a limited military conflict without triggering a major war
"""
I.e. a peaceful takeover or anything with very limited conflict would be considered NO
I think both US candidates are pretty big hardliners against China, so I don’t see the election causing that much of a difference. While Trump has said that he wasn’t committed to the defense of Taiwan, I think that when push comes to shove he’d be in favor of it. I also believe that China itself knows this. The deciding factor for the invasion of Taiwan will the state of the Chinese economy. A really good or really bad economy would push the CCP toward war, either because they believe they’ll win (good economy) or to create a rally around the flag effect (bad economy). The so-so economy that China seems to be slipping into seems to be an indicator that they may not be willing to invade Taiwan.
Might be of interest:
https://manifold.markets/dashboard/ww3


