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China To Become The World's Largest Economy By 2016 by Nobody: 8:42pm On Mar 24, 2013
By 2016, the United States will no longer be the world’s No. 1 economy. That title will be handed over to none other than the current No. 2: China.

The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development in Paris said in report published this week that China was on course to surpass the U.S. economy in just three short years.

That’s about the time President Barack Obama will end his second term. The next president will potentially be the first one since World War II that didn’t govern the world’s most powerful economy. Most forecasts, however, have China’s economy at No. 1 in 2020.

“From a long-range perspective, China has now overtaken the Euro area and is on course to become the world’s largest economy around 2016, after allowing for price differences,” OECD said in its China report released this week.

China still has a lot of growing to do. By comparison, it’s per capita income is three and a half times less than that of the U.S., and even less than Brazil. But most economists forecast that China’s rapid urbanization — now at 50% and seen rising to 70% within five years — coupled with higher incomes will change the way China operates. As it is, China is moving from an export driven economy to a more Western one that is geared to its local consumers.

Its new leadership has made social programs a focus of its five year plan as well. China, for all its wealth in the Eastern cities, is still a poor country. And an aging one. China will spend billions building out its social safety net over the next few years, improving the livelihood of retiring and elderly Chinese.

The country is also focusing more on high tech, value-added production. Green energy is a strategic focal point of the country’s 12th five year plan and that means investments in new sectors — from electric cars to lithium batteries, to alternative energies designed to eradicate China’s pollution problem. All of this investment is seen as a further catalyst for rapid growth in China. In theory, new social policies should be able to spread the wealth in this nation of 1.3 billion.

There’s no hard landing coming in China, the OECD attests.

The organization predicted China’s 2013 GDP to come in at 8.5% compared to 2012 growth of 7.5%.

“The gradual pick-up in activity provides a strong background for the ambitious reforms China needs to put in place to continue on the road to prosperity,” OECD Secretary- General Angel Gurria was quoted saying in a story by Xinhua news agency.

China vs United States

While the Chinese urban population in cities like Shanghai enjoy a standard of living similar to affluent Westerners, rural China remains poor to low income. There is also a widening income gap in China. Studies of China’s inequality almost universally report that the gap between urban and rural household incomes in China is large, has increased over time, and contributes substantially to overall inequality. According to most estimates, mean per capita income in urban China is more than triple that in rural areas, giving China one of the highest urban-rural income ratios in the world. China’s economy may be bigger than that of the U.S. by 2016, but the political task to balance the haves with the have nots will be tougher there than it is here.

China’s per capita income has ballooned over the last five years. In 2005 it was $4,102. By 2010, it hit $7,519, according to the OECD. Last year, the CIA World Factbook put China’s per capita income at $9,100. U.S. per capita income has also risen, but being a developed economy, and one that has faced one of its worst recession ever in 2008, Americans’ share of economic output in 2005 was $42,414 and rose to $46,588 five years later.

Source
Re: China To Become The World's Largest Economy By 2016 by Nobody: 8:53pm On Mar 24, 2013
Hardly surprising.

This is only a part of the ongoing rebalancing of the global balance of power. The West has been losing its dominance of world affairs for a while now. Asia has witnessed the most intense explosion of growth, jobs and human well-being in human history.

We're set for the emergence of a truly multi-polar world. The question is whether Nigeria can overcome her own domestic issues, sort out her foundational problems and stake her claim in the emerging world.

Time will tell.
Re: China To Become The World's Largest Economy By 2016 by Capnd143(m): 3:49pm On Apr 10, 2013
Us is busy spending $600 billion and sometimes $1.2 trillion on military expenditures, because of the numerous wars the create 4 themselve in the quest of maintaining world political and military supremacy at the expense of economic leadership. Kudos to china.

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Re: China To Become The World's Largest Economy By 2016 by maclatunji: 4:07pm On Apr 10, 2013
China is the new global super power. This current North Korean gra-gra is coming from the Chinese. They are holding the Americans to ransom and those guys are quaking in their boots like crazy.
Re: China To Become The World's Largest Economy By 2016 by Nobody: 4:52pm On Apr 10, 2013
Capnd143: Us is busy spending $600 billion and sometimes $1.2 trillion on military expenditures, because of the numerous wars the create 4 themselve in the quest of maintaining world political and military supremacy at the expense of economic leadership. Kudos to china.

That was what informed my submission that we are set for a multi-polar 21st century. The US will eventually have to cut down on it's military budget, Republican grandstanding notwithstanding. This will mean closing down military bases, cutting back on payments for weapons/drones and "rightsizing" its military and the DOD.

This will create the latitude for China (and other major developing countries) to exert more influence across the world. The 200-odd year-old era of Western exclusive dominance of global affairs (which was a historical anomaly, in the first place) is probably well and truly over.
Re: China To Become The World's Largest Economy By 2016 by Nobody: 4:58pm On Apr 10, 2013
maclatunji: China is the new global super power. This current North Korean gra-gra is coming from the Chinese. They are holding the Americans to ransom and those guys are quaking in their boots like crazy.

While it's true that NK's alliance with China probably provides leeway for the bellicose sabre-rattling we're currently being bombarded with, I'm not quite sure I agree with the part in bold.

This is not the first time NK has made all this noise. They need food. Just give them some food aid, and all goes quiet.
Re: China To Become The World's Largest Economy By 2016 by 5alive(m): 7:29pm On Apr 10, 2013
well china is doin their best. Let nigeria wake up for fu*ck sake....we hav wot it takes!
Re: China To Become The World's Largest Economy By 2016 by maclatunji: 11:54pm On Apr 10, 2013
HNosegbe:

While it's true that NK's alliance with China probably provides leeway for the bellicose sabre-rattling we're currently being bombarded with, I'm not quite sure I agree with the part in bold.

This is not the first time NK has made all this noise. They need food. Just give them some food aid, and all goes quiet.

The North Korean leader is far from starving. That is all that seems to matter in that country. Even top American politicians have urged China to intervene. China is like: "I can't hear you".
Re: China To Become The World's Largest Economy By 2016 by Nobody: 4:42pm On Apr 11, 2013
maclatunji:

The North Korean leader is far from starving. That is all that seems to matter in that country. Even top American politicians have urged China to intervene. China is like: "I can't hear you".

Lol...

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