An Interesting read, not intended for this versus that
Chinese Hare, Indian Tortoise?
About this programme by Peter Day
Chinese intellectuals who visit India are - I know - baffled by the place. The smells! The noise! The chaos! How on earth (they ask me) can this be a country which the experts think will jostle with their own China for the top place in the global economy some time in around 2030?
The prediction is part of the now notorious BRICs thesis, propounded almost 10 years ago by Jim O'Neill, chief economist at the giant investment bank Goldman Sachs. It was not rocket science, but few people had seen so clearly what Jim saw then.
He got his ruler out, placed it on some graph paper, and projected forward the then prevailing economic growth rates for several developing countries, and their population trends. He graphed them against the economic growth rates of the current top economic superpowers ... the USA, Japan, Europe.
And he observed that if the trend lines continued unchanged, then sometime towards the middle of the 21st century, the size of the Chinese (and then the Indian) economy would overtake the size of the hitherto No 1, the USA. And then, since the wealth per head of both much larger nations would still be much smaller, they would go on growing and growing. Russia and Brazil were the other developing countries pushing up the league table, hence BRICs.
Basic stuff, but Jim O'Neill's predictions got world-wide attention, and 10 years later he sees no reason to alter them. China is still apparently growing rapidly, and the pace of growth in India has recently been quickening.
Media
This year China overtook Japan as the second largest economy. Jim has been moving forward his projected crossover point for the eclipse of the US economy by China to around 2028.
So where does this leave India? The question is fascinatingly addressed in a new book by a prominent Indian businessman, Raghav Bahl, founder and CEO of the influential Indian media group Network 18. The books title is "Superpower? The amazing race between China's hare and India's tortoise".
He points out that 20 years ago, India's economy was actually larger than China's. Now India's total economy is the size that China had grown to by the year 2000. The Indians are ten years "behind".
Looks a little like no contest, but Raghav Bahl thinks there is time for India to catch up China and the overtake it. And that time may be now.
He thinks that China's dramatic rise was propelled by raw materials such as land, cheap labour and huge public investment that may now be running out of steam unless it embraces much more freedom and transparency. He thinks that India's innovation, entrepreneurship and democratic institutional robustness may prove to be huge advantages in the next stage of this "race".
And thanks to its One Child policy to control its population, China is going to age very fast indeed over the next few years, unlike India.
Umbilical
At Goldman Sachs Jim O'Neill now says: "India has the biggest potential of the four BRICs nations".
Raghav Bahl says that writing the book has reshaped his perspective on the argument; it is not about who will win in the great economic race, he says, but who will lose. Maybe China can - as he elegantly puts it - slice through the (perceived) umbilical cord between democracy and prosperity.
Maybe India's democracy has been overestimated as a national advantage - by the rest of the world and (I would add) by itself. India needs new leaders.
China has the advantage in terms on velocity and momentum, is the way that Raghav Bahl sums it up. But its odds on India as the institutional favourite.
The ultimate outcome is still fifty-fifty. Anyone's guess, he thinks. But what an extraordinary race this is ... for everyone, anywhere in the world.
my addition
Jim O'Neill is the first economist to coin the term BRIC and to come up with the thesis on the potential of emerging market. He is one of the first to predict china's expontential rise. So i believe this would be a good read.inviting your comments, i hope the discussion will be a civilized one and not a versus thread.
Thanks
BBC World Service - Business - Chinese Hare, Indian Tortoise?