(1) Ruchir Sharma, Broken BRICs; Why the rest stopped rising.
http://www.foreignaffairs.com/ar ... sharma/broken-brics
(a) Quote:
" Chinese growth is slowing sharply, from double digits down to seven percent or even less. And the rest of the BRICs are tumbling, too: since 2008, Brazil's annual growth has dropped from 4.5 percent to two percent; Russia's, from seven percent to 3.5 percent; and India's, from nine percent to six percent. None of this should be surprising, because it is hard to sustain rapid growth for more than a decade. The unusual circumstances of the last decade made it look easy. * * * By 2007, when only three countries in the world suffered negative growth, recessions had all but disappeared from the international scene.
"The notion of wide-ranging convergence between the developing and the developed worlds is a myth. * * * as of 2011, the difference in per capita incomes between the rich and the developing nations was back to where it was in the 1950s.
"Over the course of any given decade since 1950, on average, only a third of the emerging markets have been able to grow at an annual rate of five percent or more. Less than one-fourth have kept up that pace for two decades, and one-tenth, for three decades. Only Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, and Hong Kong have maintained this growth rate for four decades. So even before the current signs of a slowdown in the BRICs, the odds were against Brazil experiencing a full decade of growth above five percent, or Russia, its second in a row.
(b) Note:
(i) The Indian surname Sharma is a "Hindu (Brahman) name from Sanskrit šarma ‘joy,' ‘shelter.'"
(ii)
(A) Dani Rodrik, Professor of International Political Economy, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/fs/drodrik/
(B) Dani Rodrik, The Future of Economic Convergence. Kansas City Fed, August 2011.
www.kansascityfed.org/publicat/sympos/2011/2011.Rodrik.paper.pdf
Read only the following:
* Figure 4 Convergence gaps by region, 1950-2008 (at page 11) and the text beneath the figure on the same page ("For the developing countries as a group, this gap has steadily increased since the 1950s until 20000, and has precipitously dropped over the lst decade, bringing it back to levels that prevailed in the early 1950s (Figure 4). Asia has been closing the gap steadily since the late 1970s, while Africa and Latin America have only recently experienced what appeared to be, over a long horizon, a comparatively small tur in the same direction").
* Table 1 Countries that have grown at 4.5 per annum per capita.
Take notice that France, Germany, United States, and United Kingdom were not among them. (For reasons Economists still still do not understand, economy (both national and global) grew very slowly until after World War II.)
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