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China Will Overtake America Within a Decade. Want to Bet? You're on
The Economist ^ | Mar 30th 2012

Posted on 03/30/2012 8:53:59 PM PDT by nickcarraway

Michael Pettis has challenged us to a bet.

For those of you who don’t know him, Mr Pettis is a finance professor at Peking University’s Guanghua School of Management and a frequent blogger. He would like to bet that China’s dollar GDP (calculated at market exchange rates) will NOT surpass America’s in 2018. That is the year that China's economy will overtake America's if you stick with the default assumptions in our most recent* interactive chart, which allows you to plug in your own guesstimates** of future growth and inflation in the two countries, as well as the exchange rate between them.***

When he is not fretting about China’s economy, Mr Pettis runs his own record label in Beijing (Maybe Mars). If we lose the bet, he’d like us to invite one of his indie-rock bands to perform at an Economist conference. If we win, he has to give us a record deal (not really).

Free Exchange is happy to accept the bet, one blog with another. We would also love to see a band like Ourself Beside Me, Birdstriking or The Offset: Spectacles playing at an Economist conference. But we’re reluctant to commit our hard-working colleagues in the conferences division to the logistical challenges that might entail, so we were hoping we could keep it simple: how about a bottle of scotch (or baijiu) to the winner—and we’ll see what we can do about the band closer to the time?

We’d also like to propose a counter bet. Mr Pettis reckons China’s “average growth in this decade will barely break 3%.” He is definitely smarter than your average bear, but that prediction looks aggressively pessimistic to us. We’d like to bet that growth will break 3%. (Let’s say we win if it exceeds 3.5% on average in constant yuan over the decade.)

Some footnotes:

*The chart and the accompanying article were published before the full-year 2011 GDP figures were released. Using the official 2011 figures with the same assumptions suggests China will overtake America in 2019 not 2018.

**Our interactive chart is meant to be interactive. We’d be happier if people played around with it and came up with their own projections, rather than making too much fuss about ours. We wanted to keep the chart as simple as possible. As a consequence, it asks for average rates of growth, inflation, and exchange rate appreciation—but you cannot vary the rates over time. Obviously, in reality we would expect both the rate of growth and the rate of real exchange-rate appreciation to slow as China catches up with America. Our sister company, The Economist Intelligence Unit, which uses a more sophisticated model, foresees China overtaking America in 2021.

***People often forget about the importance of inflation and exchange-rate appreciation in these calculations. China’s real GDP grew by 10.6% a year over the last decade, but its nominal dollar GDP grew by 18%, thanks partly to the appreciation of the yuan against the dollar and partly to faster inflation in China than in America. One of the nice things about the interactive chart is that it helps people appreciate the significance of these two factors. Our default assumptions look perfectly reasonable by today's standards (growth of 7.75% in China, 2.5% in America; yuan appreciation of 3% and inflation--as measured by the GDP deflator--of 4% in China and 1.5% in America). But in combination these assumptions deliver a very striking result.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: china; economy; unitesstates
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1 posted on 03/30/2012 8:54:05 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

America first.

China has already surpassed American in technology exports.

Our “lead” decreases by the day, that we continue to allow the bubble-headed scam called “free trade” to destroy our jobs and industry.


2 posted on 03/30/2012 8:56:27 PM PDT by Cringing Negativism Network (There is nothing "public" about government union-controlled schools)
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To: nickcarraway

Mr.Pettis no doubt knows what he is talking about.

Is the Chinese Stock Market About to Crash?
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/chinese-stock-market-about-crash

“”The eternal optimists would have us all believe that China will awaken from its slumbers amid a blaze of new, debt-fuelled spending initiatives and so buy up all the goods we find so hard to sell at home (without offering a substantial concession in price)” is how Sean Corrigan begins his assault on the non-reality that is China’s ‘save-the-world’ protagonists. It is worth noting, however, that those who actually invest in the place seem to be too busy selling their equities to pay much attention to the Panglossians and Polyannas.”


3 posted on 03/30/2012 8:58:30 PM PDT by SatinDoll (No Foreign Nationals as our President!)
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To: Cringing Negativism Network

Technologies made by American, European, Japanese, and South Korean companies but using the “slave labor” in China mostly for assembly...


4 posted on 03/30/2012 9:01:57 PM PDT by jveritas (God bless our brave troops)
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To: Cringing Negativism Network

“China has already surpassed American in technology exports.”

Yeah, from our ideas which they stole from us!!

Our problem is internal. Back in the 1960s and 1970s we used to educate and graduate engineering students. Once the education system became thoroughly rotten, employers would no longer hire American engineers but instead went foreign.

It will eventually come back due to home schooling.


5 posted on 03/30/2012 9:02:39 PM PDT by SatinDoll (No Foreign Nationals as our President!)
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To: nickcarraway

I thought it was goin’ to be next Tuesday afternoon.. about tea time.


6 posted on 03/30/2012 9:07:02 PM PDT by WilliamofCarmichael (If modern America's Man on Horseback is out there, Get on the damn horse already!)
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To: Cringing Negativism Network

Only one problem.

Economically, perhaps. Growth, no doubt. Just like weeds. Lots of low quality.

Still to this day near 100 percent of the patents in use trace back to New York. I believe nearly 95 % on all new inventions were made in the US of A.

I also believe the Chinese are actively stealing ideas to replicate. Lets look at their new jet fighters....

I am sure one day Islam too will invent something worthy of note, probably ‘bout the same time Africa creates a idea.

Its interesting to note the correlation between western man, his development and his religion.


7 posted on 03/30/2012 9:08:37 PM PDT by himno hero (Obamas theme...Death to America...The crusaders will pay!)
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To: nickcarraway

I’ll call that obvious bluff.


8 posted on 03/30/2012 9:11:48 PM PDT by berdie
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To: SatinDoll

China can compete in the copy tech market, but while they are probably better than average at new tech it will be awhile, a generation as a guess, before they can compete with innovation.

If present trends continue China wont catch up, America will fall behind ...


9 posted on 03/30/2012 9:13:30 PM PDT by montanajoe
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To: nickcarraway

If Obama stays in office he will just surrender all technology and manufacturing to China just to destroy us.


10 posted on 03/30/2012 9:23:31 PM PDT by formosa (Formosa)
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To: montanajoe
I disagree.

Americans are innovative, particularly those who do not go to college. College tends to teach you what things are impossible. Learning how to make do or do without tends to teach one how to think and innovate.

The following story demonstrates what I mean: in the 1920s a graduate student at Princeton wrote a thesis on why it was physically impossible to build radio tuning coils small enough to create an automobile radio.

A self-taught man, not knowing it was impossible, went ahead and did it.

“...Tuning coils in the radio frequency stage of a set were rather large and [Bill] Lear knew how to reduce their size by using Litz wire. Wire braided from many fine strands has a large surface area giving it high conductivity at radio frequency. Lear borrowed $5,000 from his friend Algot Olson to make machines to wrap the strands, braid the wire, and wind the coils. The industry was set up in the basement of his mother’s old house on 65th street, and done with assistance of Don Mitchell, a railroad electrician. Lear called the company, Radio Coil and Wire Corporation. They took an order of 50,000 coils from Eugene F. McDonald of Zenith Electronics when they demonstrated them. These small coils were one-quarter the size of coils with solid wire.”

Yes, it is the Lear of Lear Jet fame. Bill Lear never graduated from high school, yet he was a lifelong inventor. And the fellow from Princeton? I can never remember his name!

11 posted on 03/30/2012 9:26:27 PM PDT by SatinDoll (No Foreign Nationals as our President!)
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To: nickcarraway

Well - as an old great granny, I remember not too many years ago when it was JAPAN that was going to “take over America. “
They owned half of L.A. and other cities and lotsa land...

but a funny thin happened along the way. They fell on hard times - and things went up in smoke


12 posted on 03/30/2012 9:27:07 PM PDT by maine-iac7 ("If you bought it - a truck brought it" - and because of the price of gas/it costs more.)
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To: maine-iac7

Japan does not have a population of 1.3 billion...


13 posted on 03/30/2012 9:30:10 PM PDT by Cringing Negativism Network (There is nothing "public" about government union-controlled schools)
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To: montanajoe

From a strategic viewpoint why should China rush. She has no foreign wars or obligations with her military. The only flashpoint with the US is if Taiwan declares independence. Other then that China has retreat positions if she cannot bluff her way to what she wants. China can afford to build space station, mission to the moon and aircraft carrier operations at a leisurely pace while her economy expands and her foreign reserves increases as the US decreases. Look up www.globalfirepower.com. China is distant third to US in defense but she has $ 2600 trillion in foreign exchange reserves while the US can only muster $ 150 trillion and decreasing from deficit spending. China’s strength is fiscal not military. Without firing a shot the US due to crippling debt is forced to reduce her military forces and pull back from the world, while China simply fill in the vacuum created. This does not mean China is perfect. She has internal and cultural weakness. The US had the same problems in her rise to world power. War of Southern Succession (American Civil War), racial inequality, labor and environmental abuses is part of our industrialization process. US resolved it thru our Constitutional, Christian, and democratic ideals. China has survived dynastic changes and upheavals and has centuries of experience and the modern world for her leaders to choose from to resolve their own internal social issues.


14 posted on 03/30/2012 9:40:10 PM PDT by Fee
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To: nickcarraway

While there is certainly a possibility of the Chinese economy becoming larger then our own by 2022 (though I personally have my doubt’s), I think that the reasons that they give for that in the article is very flaws - namely, assuming that the Chinese rate of growth will remain the same, simply... because. Plenty of industrializing nations like Mexico or South Korea saw similarly high levels of GDP growth - and none of them managed to keep it up. Such great levels as their proposed 7.75% growth rate are unsustainable and can’t be kept up into the future indefinitely by China. It will crash down to a level more comparable with other industrialized nations sooner or later, and probably sooner. The West may be drowning in financial problems, but so is China.


15 posted on 03/30/2012 9:42:37 PM PDT by JerseyanExile
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To: SatinDoll

Well said.

That illustrates exactly the greatness of America and Americans. Its how we are wired to think and to believe in ourselves.

When children in other parts of the world are asking “Why?” a child in America playing with his toy rockets and chemistry set is asking “Why Not?”

Culture, religion, politics, hierarchy, cronyism absolutely inhibits innovation.

great story, thank you for sharing


16 posted on 03/30/2012 9:44:47 PM PDT by saywhatagain
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To: saywhatagain

You’re welcome.


17 posted on 03/30/2012 9:47:41 PM PDT by SatinDoll (No Foreign Nationals as our President!)
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To: Fee
China’s strength is fiscal not military.

By jove, you hit the nail on the head! While we spend Billions in the middle-east protecting oil supplies to China, they are busy manufacturing all sorts of goods to fill our stores making us go deeper in debt to China. Just wait till cars made in China hit our shores. Then they can begin buying our infra-structure and finish us off as permanent slaves to our new masters.

18 posted on 03/30/2012 9:59:12 PM PDT by entropy12 (Every tax payer now owes $150,000 towards the national debt. We will follow Greece soon.)
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To: Fee

You make some very good points.

The major difference between China and the U.S.A. is that we never stop at frontiers, we just plow on ahead. China did stop once it grew to a certain size and then hesitated to explore overseas even though possessing a sizable navy. The China of the Ming Dynasty, and the Ottoman Empire in what is present day Turkey, were the superpowers of circa 1500 AD.

If anyone then had said that by 2000 AD, millions of people world-wide would live in wealth because of an industrial revolution centered in what was then a rustic Europe and a wilderness in North America, that person would have been considered insane.

We’ve come a long way, and I don’t for a moment believe it is over.

However this election is very important, because the wrong person as President will destroy this nation and set us back. Our military for the past twenty years or so has been used to police the world and maintain security for international commercial interests. This is called Globalism. Romney and the Bush coterie support it, and it is bankrupting the nation. These elitists don’t give a damn about anyone’s God-given rights. All they care about is keeping themselves in power and lucre.


19 posted on 03/30/2012 10:03:36 PM PDT by SatinDoll (No Foreign Nationals as our President!)
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To: nickcarraway
I won't wager for 2018. But I believe prior to 2025 is a good bet.

China already is larger than the US in electricity consumption and total energy consumption in general.

Auto production and consumption, China already is larger.

Construction, no matter how you measure it, concrete consumption, square footage built, etc., China is BY FAR larger than the US.

Steel production, about 6 or 7 times larger than the US.

And when measured in purchasing power parity, China's GDP already begins to approach the US, roughly 3/4 of the size.

The list goes on.

2018 may be assuming if all goes well, but I believe prior to 2025 is not a bad bet. And that is slightly over a decade from now.

20 posted on 03/30/2012 10:11:46 PM PDT by ponder life
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