quarta-feira, 3 de março de 2010
TEc "East or famine" - On Asia's growing economic weight
I know not what the context was when Winston Churchill will have said the words in the quote here.Regarding Asia he could hardly have been closer to the truth.
While Japan and many of the ASEAN-members - Asian NICS often referred to as tigers during their booms - had already achieved developed status, the novelty in latter years is China and India - the Continent's and the world's two most populous nations - finally on track to joining them.
What is happening is actually Asia taking up its rightful place in the world economic pecking order.
The two countries have walked two very different roads to volume material progress.
Now that hundreds of million have seen real improvement in their living conditions as a result of sustained high-growth over consecutive years, the evidence is one of welcome balancing taking place.
The share percentages but especially the trendline obtained plotting those values projecting them into the future leave no room to doubt Asia's growing weight.
The starting points of the two countries were so low, however, that despite breakneck growth achieved it will be sometime before volumes finally reflect prosperous societies on per capita levels.
That explains the huge potential still untapped.
Importantly though, the trendline is clearly established.
If proven right over the coming 10 years, by 2020 a shift of some sort in world economic power will have occurred.
So much for Asia.
What roles then for the US and the European Union during the same 10 years?
The US will likely find optimal growth in the 2-3% bracket granted it has long matured as a developed rich economy.
My nagging questions fall mainly on the EU, itself a far from homogenous grouping encompassing relatively poverty-stricken Bulgaria and affluent Netherlands.
In between large, medium, small and minute economies with wide dispersion in wealth, social expectation and governance.
If sluggish rates now observed across countries stick as the bloc emerges from the downturn there will be a much dimished role for Europe in the future.
To put it simple the rise of China and India is only half-way (probably less) complete.
Another 10 consecutive years of 7-10% economic growth compared to the EU's 1-2%, according to pessimists(?) has got to show in a big way.
Lastly, I find Asia's ebullient performance only natural.
Unnatural are the lacklustre despiriting forecasts for the EU.
Unless a big jolt from within is provided by its core powerhouses.
While Japan and many of the ASEAN-members - Asian NICS often referred to as tigers during their booms - had already achieved developed status, the novelty in latter years is China and India - the Continent's and the world's two most populous nations - finally on track to joining them.
What is happening is actually Asia taking up its rightful place in the world economic pecking order.
The two countries have walked two very different roads to volume material progress.
Now that hundreds of million have seen real improvement in their living conditions as a result of sustained high-growth over consecutive years, the evidence is one of welcome balancing taking place.
The share percentages but especially the trendline obtained plotting those values projecting them into the future leave no room to doubt Asia's growing weight.
The starting points of the two countries were so low, however, that despite breakneck growth achieved it will be sometime before volumes finally reflect prosperous societies on per capita levels.
That explains the huge potential still untapped.
Importantly though, the trendline is clearly established.
If proven right over the coming 10 years, by 2020 a shift of some sort in world economic power will have occurred.
So much for Asia.
What roles then for the US and the European Union during the same 10 years?
The US will likely find optimal growth in the 2-3% bracket granted it has long matured as a developed rich economy.
My nagging questions fall mainly on the EU, itself a far from homogenous grouping encompassing relatively poverty-stricken Bulgaria and affluent Netherlands.
In between large, medium, small and minute economies with wide dispersion in wealth, social expectation and governance.
If sluggish rates now observed across countries stick as the bloc emerges from the downturn there will be a much dimished role for Europe in the future.
To put it simple the rise of China and India is only half-way (probably less) complete.
Another 10 consecutive years of 7-10% economic growth compared to the EU's 1-2%, according to pessimists(?) has got to show in a big way.
Lastly, I find Asia's ebullient performance only natural.
Unnatural are the lacklustre despiriting forecasts for the EU.
Unless a big jolt from within is provided by its core powerhouses.
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