BUSINESS
A noted China-watcher at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace once said that the 'only thing rising faster than China is the hype about China'.
A new study says the country will go from ‘poor’ to ‘super rich’
HONG KONG: A noted China-watcher at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace once said that the “only thing rising faster than China is the hype about China”.
A recent research study published by the US National Bureau of Economic Research, America’s premier economic research organisation, seems to confirm that sobering statement.
The research paper, authored by Robert Fogel, director of the Center for Population Economics at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business, makes some breath-taking, mind-numbing projections. Sample these:
*Fogel says that, by 2040, China’s GDP (in purchasing power parity terms) will be $123 trillion - or about 40% of global GDP that year - and nearly three times the total output of the entire world in 2000. That figure represents a 2,400% GDP growth since 2000. In fact, says Fogel, in 2040, the Chinese market “will probably be larger than the combined markets of the US, the European Union, India, and Japan.” How’s that for a monster economy!
*By 2040, reckons Fogel, China’s per capita income will reach $85,000 - about twice the projected figure in respect of the European Union! That’s a 23-fold increase in 40 years (starting 2000 when the per capita income was about $3,616)!
*In other words, says Fogel, in 40 years (starting 2000), China will have raced right across the economic spectrum from being a ‘poor’ country to a ‘super rich’ one!
Fogel’s study is also remarkable for one other projection: the decline of Europe. The European Union’s share of global GDP will decline from 21% in 2000 to about 5% in 2040, he prophesies. The relative decline of the European Union, implied by its stagnation in population and its modest growth in GDP, is the “most unsettling of the forecasts,” says Fogel.
But it is Fogel’s projections in respect of China that are the “most provocative”, as he himself acknowledges. He then goes on to explain the basis for “so optimistic a view”.
One of the critical drivers of China’s economic growth over the next generation, argues Fogel, will be the growth in labour productivity that comes of workers shifting from agriculture to other sectors of the economy, such as industry or services. In his estimation, such an inter-industry shift added 3 percentage points to the annual national growth rate from 1978 to 2003. “I expect inter-industry shifts to continue to be an important element in China’s growth.”
A second reason for Fogel’s projection of this meteoric rise is that China is investing heavily in human capital, which, he says, will act as an engine of high economic growth. China, he notes, has invested heavily in rapidly expanding enrolment ratios in both secondary and tertiary education. “Increasing the enrolment ratio in high school to 100% and in college to 50% over the next generation would, by itself, add over 6 percentage points to the annual growth rate,” says Fogel.
In making these rosy projections, Fogel airily dismisses fears articulated by other analysts of an economic breakdown or social unrest. Conceding that the inefficiency of many state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in China may be a drag on the economy, Fogel, however, says that “the idea that these inefficient firms will suddenly go bankrupt is far-fetched.”
Not only does the government have the finances needed to continue subsidising inefficient firms if it chooses to do so for economic or political reasons, but the burden of these subsidies will also gradually diminish because the share of the industrial output supplied by these underperforming SOEs will gradually decline, he argues.
Additionally, in Fogel’s estimation, China’s political leaders have a strategy in place for the devolution of power and for co-opting elites. “The government’s responsiveness to popular concerns indicates that political stability is likely to remain at the level required for continued long-term economic growth,” he concludes.
And what of India? Fogel’s straight-line projection of economic growth is somewhat flattering to India as well (but not quite as flattering as it is to China). By 2040, India’s GDP (in PPP terms) will be $36,528 billion, which will account for 12% of global economic output. That figure represents a 1,400% increase over GDP in 2000. India’s per-capita income too will rise from $2,370 in 2000 to about $24,000 in 2040, according to Fogel’s projection.
Fogel explains why he feels more optimistic about China’s economic growth than India’s. For one, he says, although India has an excellent system of higher education, it lags substantially behind China, South Korea and Asean countries in educational achievement.
Over 40% of the population is still illiterate and gross secondary school enrolment rates in 2002 were less than half the numbers in China. And even the enrolment rate in higher education in India lags behind China’s, he points out. Agricultural labour productivity growth rates in India are half that of in China, and given that two-thirds of India’s labour force is still in agriculture, this hinders growth of the overall economy, say Fogel.
China’s meteoric rise of the past three decades has, of course, proved countless Cassandras wrong. Even so, Fogel’s linear extrapolation of human capital trends and his broad-sweep delineation of China’s future seem overly optimistic.
As George Mason University professor of economics Tyler Cowen, author of Discover Your Inner Economist, notes half in jest: “Repeat after me: ‘China in the 20th century had two major revolutions, a civil war, the Great Leap Forward, mass starvation, the Cultural Revolution, arguably the most tyrannical dictator ever… And now they will go from rags to riches without even a business cycle burp.’ I don’t think you can do it with a straight face!”
SEBI's first reaction on Gautam Adani bribery case, begins inquiry into...
Meet Hyderabad girl who began NEET preparation in class 7, scored 99.9 percentile, secured AIR...
Badshah breaks his silence on dating rumours with Pakistani star Hania Aamir: ‘We have a lot of…’
Delhi pollution: Air quality deteriorates to 'severe' category in Delhi-NCR; AQI at 419
'I think bro is her EX': Man performs risky bike stunt with burqa-clad woman in Bangladesh, watch
Viral video: Little girl's power-packed dance to 'beer song' melts hearts online, watch
Explained: Why India must win the 1st Test against Australia in Perth
Raima Sen mourns Bharat Dev Varma's demise, pens emotional note for 'great father, great husband'
DNA TV Show: Ahead of Maharashtra poll results, MVA, Mahayuti engage in resort politics
Maharashtra: Stage set for assembly poll results; Mahayuti, MVA confident of their victories
All set for vote counting in Jharkhand tomorrow; NDA, JMM-led alliances confident of winning
Watch: Australia star inquires Rishabh Pant about his next IPL team, gets 2-word reply
Shah Rukh Khan’s house Mannat was first offered to his industry rival…, but he refused because...
The Visionary Who Promises a Blue Sky for India: Holger Thorsten Schubart’s G20 Climate Speech
The Surge of High-End Living: Luxury Residential Market to Outpace Other Segments
FeFCon 2024 to be Held in Bangalore: A Premier Event on Fever Management
'That’s wild': Noida man turns cigarette butts into teddy bears in viral video, watch
London Airport evacuates passengers over security threat, thousands stranded
The World’s First Innovative Iron Supplement to Combat Iron Deficiency and Anaemia
Meet grandmother who became fashion icon after trying on her granddaughter’s clothes
IND vs AUS: Rishabh Pant joins Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma in elite WTC list, becomes 3rd Indian to...
'All scripted drama...': Puneet Superstar allegedly assaulted by influencers in viral video, watch
Actress Ana de Armas caught kissing Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel’s son in viral photos
Oreshnik's Shadow: Will Russia's hypersonic missile force west to back down?
‘You’re So Beautiful’: World’s tallest woman meets world’s shortest woman over tea, pics go viral
Delhi-NCR Air Pollution: Consequences of GRAP-4 are drastic, may have adverse effects, says SC
Delhi-NCR Air Pollution: Schools likely to stay closed till..., check city-wise update
Maharashtra: 3 killed, 9 hospitalised after gas leak at fertiliser plant in Sangli
THIS farm is selling a cup of coffee for Rs 28000, but there's a twist, it is...
Chhattisgarh: 10 Maoists killed after encounter with security personnel in Sukma
Mukesh Ambani's SUPERHIT plan for Jio users, offers unlimited 5G access for 1 year for just Rs...
IND vs AUS 1st Test: KL Rahul's dismissal sparks DRS controversy in Perth Test
Dense fog, heavy rain predicted in these states till November 25; check here
Oreshnik Hypersonic Missile: Which nations are within its range?
Bihar teacher, principal reach school in drunken state; know what happened next
'I have faced a lot of...': Arjun Kapoor REVEALS his biggest fear amid break up with Malaika Arora
How millions of Indians may get affected due to US indictment of Gautam Adani in bribery case
Amid divorce rumours with Aishwarya Rai, Abhishek Bachchan says 'missing someone is okay but...'
After Bibles, watches and sneakers, Donald Trump is now selling autographed guitars, price is...
Delhi pollution: Air quality improves to ‘very poor’ category, AQI at...
Vladimir Putin's BIG threat, warns he could strike UK with new ballistic missile if...
Shillong Teer Results TODAY November 22, 2024 Live Updates: Check winning numbers here