The International Monetary Fund recently released the latest financial statistics for the world economy.
If you measure national economic output in terms of “real” goods and services, this year China will produce $17.6 trillion and the U.S. will produce $17.4 trillion.
For the first time since the end of the 19th century America is not the leading economic power on the planet.
We’ve gone from the top creditor nation on the plant to the top debtor nation in just 20 short years.
As recently as 2000, we produced nearly three times as much as the Chinese.To put the numbers slightly differently, China now accounts for 16.5% of the global economy when measured in real purchasing-power terms, compared with 16.3% for the U.S.
This latest economic earthquake follows the development last year when China surpassed the U.S. for the first time in terms of global trade.
I reported on this looming development over two years ago, but the moment came sooner than I or anyone else had predicted. China’s recent decision to bring gross domestic product calculations in line with international standards has revealed activity that had previously gone uncounted.
Hear how China’s Sina Weibo microblog makes you money, watch how your fingertips could give you access to your health records and check out top five games for holiday gifts.
These calculations are based on a well-established and widely used economic measure known as purchasing-power parity (or PPP), which measures the actual output as opposed to fluctuations in exchange rates. So a Starbucks venti Frappucino served in Beijing counts the same as a venti Frappucino served in Minneapolis, regardless of what happens to be going on among foreign-exchange traders.
Make no mistake. This is a geopolitical earthquake with a high reading on the Richter scale.
PPP is the real way of comparing economies. It is one reported by the IMF and was, for example, the one used by McKinsey & Co. consultants back in the 1990s when they undertook a study of economic productivity on behalf of the British government.
Yes, when you look at mere international exchange rates, the U.S. economy remains bigger than that of China, allegedly by almost 70%. But such measures, although they are widely followed, are largely meaningless. Does the U.S. economy really shrink if the dollar falls 10% on international currency markets? Does the recent plunge in the yen mean the Japanese economy is vanishing before our eyes?
Back in 2012, when I first reported on these figures, the IMF tried to challenge the importance of PPP. I was not surprised. It is not in anyone’s interest at the IMF that people in the Western world start focusing too much on the sheer extent of China’s power. But the PPP data come from the IMF, not from me. And it is noteworthy that when the IMF’s official World Economic Outlook compares countries by their share of world output, it does so using PPP.
Yes, all statistics are open to various quibbles. It is perfectly possible China’s latest numbers overstate output — or understate them. That may also be true of U.S. GDP figures. But the IMF data are the best we have.
Make no mistake: This is a geopolitical earthquake with a high reading on the Richter scale. Throughout history, political and military power have always depended on economic power. Britain was the workshop of the world before she ruled the waves. And it was Britain’s relative economic decline that preceded the collapse of her power. And it was a similar story with previous hegemonic powers such as France and Spain.
This will not change anything tomorrow or next week, but it will change almost everything in the longer term. We have lived in a world dominated by the U.S. since at least 1945 and, in many ways, since the late 19th century. And we have lived for 200 years — since the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 — in a world dominated by two reasonably democratic, constitutional countries in Great Britain and the U.S.A. For all their flaws, the two countries have been in the vanguard worldwide in terms of civil liberties, democratic processes and constitutional rights.
Thanks democrats spending more than you have!
THATS BECAUSE OSLAMA HAS GIVING THEM HALF OF OUR ECONOMY
the day ZIMBABWE outranks us in anything,WE’RE DONE!
Gee, Maybe if these zionist puppet politicians didn’t sell our nation out, we’d still be on top?
We need to STOP paying other countries to hate us. Without ALL those BILLIONS of dollars going to “help the hungry” around the world THAT we borrowed it wouldn’t be like this.
We have the highest taxes too..and no one in their right mind would want to pay out taxes. England surpasses us at a flat 19% but if you look at your pay stub and figure your taxes at tax time you will see that we actually pay in almost 30% of our pay to the government. Even though we get refunds they use our money for that year and pay no interest on what has set in escrow(they call it escrow-being held for us so they do not have to pay interest) Yet they also USE the Social Security as a plug for anything that needs a hand in the government and Soc Sec payees only get MAYBE a 3% cost of living increase, which does not keep up with the cost of living increases and gas,medical care, insurance premiums, etc. My supplemental insurance has raised their premiums at a rate of 5% per year for the last 4 years!! YET if we do not have medicare supplemental insurance we can be penalized by the gov’t that is using our benefits as a lending institution without paying interest to the “Holders” of Social Security..the people who paid in..now they are saying they will be allowing these illegal who never aid in to receive disability when they never paid taxed or worked here legally!!
But if we blocked trad with them, and stopped importing from China they can kiss off their number one standing, and they know it!
Thank obama
and the majority of that has been in the last six …
and how does that matter when you cant even breathe their air they wont be alive long enough to enjoy the wealth