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'Chindia' rising: Not your same old, golly-gee Asian superpowers
MARCUS GEE
May 30, 2007
If you want to know how the rise of Asia's new economic superpowers is changing the world, take a look at a new book called Chindia: How China and India are Revolutionizing Global Business. It's a collection of articles by journalists at BusinessWeek, nicely stitched together by the magazine's former Asia correspondent Peter Engardio.
It's easy to be too golly-gee about Asia's spectacular rise, but when you read some of the facts in this book you can't help but keep exclaiming "golly," "gee" quite a bit. For instance did you know that:
Some experts estimate that there are more information technology engineers in the Indian IT Mecca of Bangalore (about 150,000) than in Silicon Valley (120,000)
China is already the world's biggest cellphone market, with more than 350 million subscribers, and that is expected to hit 600 million by 2009.
That same year, the number of Chinese with broadband Internet access should surpass the number in the U.S.
China and India produce half a million new engineers and scientists a year, compared with 70,000 in the U.S.
In 2008, the value of goods exported by China is expected to pass $1-trillion (U.S.) a year.
We have never witnessed anything quite like what is happening in India and China. As this book notes, the world has seen other countries take off in breathtaking fashion: Japan in the 1950s and 1960s, South Korea, Hong Kong and the other Tiger economies of the Far East in the 1960s and 1970s. But none had the demographic heft - the pure numbers of people - to change so much for so many industries around the world.
You have to look back to the emergence of a young, vibrant U.S. in the 19th-century to find a parallel to the rise of "Chindia" today. But as BusinessWeek points out, even that remarkable rise can't really compare with the phenomenon of China and India. "Never has the world seen the simultaneous, sustained takeoffs of two nations that together account for one-third of the planet's population."
For the past 20 years, India's economy has been growing at an average of 6 per cent a year, China's an amazing 9.5 per cent (11.1 per cent in the most recent quarter). If things continue at that rate, China could overtake the U.S. as the world's biggest economy in 40 years and India could surpass Germany as the world's No. 3 economy in 30 years. By mid-century, India and China combined could account for half of global output.
Of course, things could easily go off the tracks. Chindia's authors are careful to point out the risks and liabilities that both countries have. China has a brittle, undemocratic political system and rising levels of open, often violent, unrest. Its growth has been fuelled partly by massive government investment, some of it wasteful and poorly directed. Its banking system is inefficient, with bad-loan levels of up to 20 per cent. Its stock exchanges often seem more like casinos than modern capital markets.
India, for its part, suffers from crumbling airports, highways and ports, an enormous, stifling bureaucracy and horrendous (though improving) levels of poverty and illiteracy, to say nothing of religious tensions and the enduring shame of the caste system.
Despite their dazzling growth rates, India and China started from such a low base that, put together, they still produce just 6 per cent of world output. On the other hand, their growth is blinding. During the Industrial Revolution, Britain and the U.S. doubled real per capita incomes in 50 years. China is doing it every nine.
Whatever challenges they face, the dynamism and optimism of these two giants seems unquenchable. "What makes the two giants especially powerful is that they complement each other's strengths," Chindia's authors remark. China is a manufacturing powerhouse, India specializes in software, design, services and precision industry.
That makes for a world-beating combination. But it doesn't mean the rest of us lose out. The Economist magazine predicted last year that, largely because of exploding growth in places like India and China, "the first decade of the 21st century could see the fastest growth in average world income in the whole of history."
Golly. Gee.
mgee@globeandmail.com
MARCUS GEE
May 30, 2007
If you want to know how the rise of Asia's new economic superpowers is changing the world, take a look at a new book called Chindia: How China and India are Revolutionizing Global Business. It's a collection of articles by journalists at BusinessWeek, nicely stitched together by the magazine's former Asia correspondent Peter Engardio.
It's easy to be too golly-gee about Asia's spectacular rise, but when you read some of the facts in this book you can't help but keep exclaiming "golly," "gee" quite a bit. For instance did you know that:
Some experts estimate that there are more information technology engineers in the Indian IT Mecca of Bangalore (about 150,000) than in Silicon Valley (120,000)
China is already the world's biggest cellphone market, with more than 350 million subscribers, and that is expected to hit 600 million by 2009.
That same year, the number of Chinese with broadband Internet access should surpass the number in the U.S.
China and India produce half a million new engineers and scientists a year, compared with 70,000 in the U.S.
In 2008, the value of goods exported by China is expected to pass $1-trillion (U.S.) a year.
We have never witnessed anything quite like what is happening in India and China. As this book notes, the world has seen other countries take off in breathtaking fashion: Japan in the 1950s and 1960s, South Korea, Hong Kong and the other Tiger economies of the Far East in the 1960s and 1970s. But none had the demographic heft - the pure numbers of people - to change so much for so many industries around the world.
You have to look back to the emergence of a young, vibrant U.S. in the 19th-century to find a parallel to the rise of "Chindia" today. But as BusinessWeek points out, even that remarkable rise can't really compare with the phenomenon of China and India. "Never has the world seen the simultaneous, sustained takeoffs of two nations that together account for one-third of the planet's population."
For the past 20 years, India's economy has been growing at an average of 6 per cent a year, China's an amazing 9.5 per cent (11.1 per cent in the most recent quarter). If things continue at that rate, China could overtake the U.S. as the world's biggest economy in 40 years and India could surpass Germany as the world's No. 3 economy in 30 years. By mid-century, India and China combined could account for half of global output.
Of course, things could easily go off the tracks. Chindia's authors are careful to point out the risks and liabilities that both countries have. China has a brittle, undemocratic political system and rising levels of open, often violent, unrest. Its growth has been fuelled partly by massive government investment, some of it wasteful and poorly directed. Its banking system is inefficient, with bad-loan levels of up to 20 per cent. Its stock exchanges often seem more like casinos than modern capital markets.
India, for its part, suffers from crumbling airports, highways and ports, an enormous, stifling bureaucracy and horrendous (though improving) levels of poverty and illiteracy, to say nothing of religious tensions and the enduring shame of the caste system.
Despite their dazzling growth rates, India and China started from such a low base that, put together, they still produce just 6 per cent of world output. On the other hand, their growth is blinding. During the Industrial Revolution, Britain and the U.S. doubled real per capita incomes in 50 years. China is doing it every nine.
Whatever challenges they face, the dynamism and optimism of these two giants seems unquenchable. "What makes the two giants especially powerful is that they complement each other's strengths," Chindia's authors remark. China is a manufacturing powerhouse, India specializes in software, design, services and precision industry.
That makes for a world-beating combination. But it doesn't mean the rest of us lose out. The Economist magazine predicted last year that, largely because of exploding growth in places like India and China, "the first decade of the 21st century could see the fastest growth in average world income in the whole of history."
Golly. Gee.
mgee@globeandmail.com