Pulling ahead in purchasing power
Updated: 2014-05-06 07:46
By MIKE BASTIN (China Daily)
|
|||||||||||
A truck carries a container at the Qingdao port in Shandong province. Organizations such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have long forecast the inevitability of China's ascent to the top of the global economic ladder, but probably not until 2020 or even 2024. YU FANGPING/CHINA DAILY |
Nation ready to overtake US years earlier than international economists expected
Far sooner than expected and predicted, it appears that China is on the verge of overtaking the United States as the world's largest economy. Organizations such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have long forecast the inevitability of China's ascent to the top of the global economic ladder, but not until 2020 or even 2024.
However, an announcement recently by the World Bank's International Comparison Program in Washington asserts that China's ascent may take place as early as this year, according to analyses based largely on purchasing power parity.
|
|
According to the ICP's PPP-based calculations, China's economy accounted for only 43 percent of the US economy in 2005, rising to 87 percent in 2011.
There are two limitations in the ICP's PPP approach. The first is the fact that money tends to "go further" in poorer, less-developed countries where prices are generally lower. The second is the apparent omission of any key economic indicators on a per capita basis. According to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, the average income in China was 75 percent of the global average while that in the US was 370 percent.
Still, the ICP's figures highlight China's rapidly rising global economic power and should also stimulate discussion and debate on the speed of China's economic transformation and the path this may take over the coming years.
Before attempting to plot the trajectory of China's economic future, it is imperative to learn from the nation's economic emergence since the birth of the "Open Door" policy in the late 1970s. Looking back, it is clear that a nonlinear relationship appears to exist between economic emergence and time in the case of China.
|
|
Top 10 countries with highest GDP in 2013 | Top 10 regions with highest GDP in China |
Related Stories
China set to overtake US as world's biggest goods trader 2014-01-04 01:58
China to overtake US as No 1 purchaser 2013-08-15 23:40
China's economy will not see hard landing 2014-04-17 11:23
Economic growth higher than expected in Q1 2014-04-16 13:56
China's growth remains resilient 2014-04-16 11:18
Li urges to keep economy growing 2014-04-14 07:56
Today's Top News
Deal signed to upgrade roads, grid in Ethiopia
Tokyo lawmakers begin China visit
Foreign spies busted in Guangdong
Iran test-fires air defense system
Yunnan's only panda perking up thanks to TV
Intl cooperation to aid drug fight
Senior Chongqing official investigated
Driver of overturned car linked to 2009 fatal wreck
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Variety is the spice of academic life |
Documents prove the truth can't be buried |
Race to remember story of resistance |
Strait talking: From enemy to friend |
Welcome to the world’s largest garbage dump |
The latest word on books: Keep those pages coming |