Cement production as a barometer: global output hit its peak back in 2021, then slipped 9% by 2025. Sounds like a minor dip? Not really. When concrete production stalls, it signals something bigger—the machinery of material-intensive growth is losing momentum. Construction slowdowns, manufacturing contractions, infrastructure cooling. Real economy cooling down harder than most people realize. Resource constraints are tightening. Growth isn't just decelerating; the whole cycle of expansion-driven development is getting questioned. Worth paying attention to if you're thinking about long-term asset cycles and where we're headed.
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MysteryBoxAddict
· 01-09 04:01
Cement production is declining, this is the true state of the real economy.
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MoodFollowsPrice
· 01-07 01:50
Cement production drops by 9%. This thing has long been obvious. Construction is struggling, and everything will follow suit.
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TommyTeacher1
· 01-07 01:46
The cement production volume really depends; the decline in 2009 wasn't as simple as it seemed.
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TokenomicsPolice
· 01-07 01:32
The decline in cement production really indicates something big, but most people haven't realized it yet.
Cement production as a barometer: global output hit its peak back in 2021, then slipped 9% by 2025. Sounds like a minor dip? Not really. When concrete production stalls, it signals something bigger—the machinery of material-intensive growth is losing momentum. Construction slowdowns, manufacturing contractions, infrastructure cooling. Real economy cooling down harder than most people realize. Resource constraints are tightening. Growth isn't just decelerating; the whole cycle of expansion-driven development is getting questioned. Worth paying attention to if you're thinking about long-term asset cycles and where we're headed.