VCheng
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Another interesting chart:
from: Comparing India and China: Chasing the dragon | The Economist
Comparing India and China
Chasing the dragon
Oct 3rd 2011, 15:26 by The Economist online
How the Asian superpowers compare on various measures of development
In the recent Singapore Grand Prix, a car belonging to the Force India team reached the finish line just 111 seconds after the leader. Todays chart uses a stopwatch to compare Indias progress in development against another pace-setter, China. The chart shows the number of years that have elapsed since China passed the development milestones that India has now reached. Indias income per head, for example, was about $3,200 in 2009 (holding purchasing power constant across time and between countries). China reached that level of development nine years ago. The lag in social progress is much longer. A childs odds of surviving past their fifth birthday are as bad in India today as they were in China in the 1970s. Moreover, the chart does not necessarily imply that India in nine years time will be as rich as China is today. That is because China grew faster in the last nine years than India is likely to grow over the next nine. We stopped the clock at $3200 per head. But China did not stop racing ahead.
View attachment 9029
from: Comparing India and China: Chasing the dragon | The Economist
Comparing India and China
Chasing the dragon
Oct 3rd 2011, 15:26 by The Economist online
How the Asian superpowers compare on various measures of development
In the recent Singapore Grand Prix, a car belonging to the Force India team reached the finish line just 111 seconds after the leader. Todays chart uses a stopwatch to compare Indias progress in development against another pace-setter, China. The chart shows the number of years that have elapsed since China passed the development milestones that India has now reached. Indias income per head, for example, was about $3,200 in 2009 (holding purchasing power constant across time and between countries). China reached that level of development nine years ago. The lag in social progress is much longer. A childs odds of surviving past their fifth birthday are as bad in India today as they were in China in the 1970s. Moreover, the chart does not necessarily imply that India in nine years time will be as rich as China is today. That is because China grew faster in the last nine years than India is likely to grow over the next nine. We stopped the clock at $3200 per head. But China did not stop racing ahead.
View attachment 9029