Martian2
SENIOR MEMBER

- Joined
- Dec 15, 2009
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In the year 2000, US retail sales were $3.3 trillion and China's retail sales were $472 billion. It's obvious that the US economy was much larger than China's in the year 2000.
For 2018, both the US and Chinese annual retail sales are $5.8 trillion. This is an important economic indicator that the US and Chinese economies are roughly the same size.
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The Chinese are now buying as much stuff as Americans, a game-changer for the world economy | The Washington Post (January 11, 2018)
"The mighty force of consumerism has taken hold in China. In 2018, retail sales in China are expected to equal or surpass sales in the United States for the first time, another definitive marker in China's rise to economic superpower status. (first paragraph)
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Trump has pointed to the tariffs President Ronald Reagan put on Japanese semiconductors in the 1980s as a model he wants to emulate, but the difference is the U.S. economy was far larger than Japan's at the time. Now the United States faces an economic equal [in China]."
For 2018, both the US and Chinese annual retail sales are $5.8 trillion. This is an important economic indicator that the US and Chinese economies are roughly the same size.
----------
The Chinese are now buying as much stuff as Americans, a game-changer for the world economy | The Washington Post (January 11, 2018)
"The mighty force of consumerism has taken hold in China. In 2018, retail sales in China are expected to equal or surpass sales in the United States for the first time, another definitive marker in China's rise to economic superpower status. (first paragraph)
...
Trump has pointed to the tariffs President Ronald Reagan put on Japanese semiconductors in the 1980s as a model he wants to emulate, but the difference is the U.S. economy was far larger than Japan's at the time. Now the United States faces an economic equal [in China]."

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