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New 4 Little Dragons in Asia

ASEAN+East Asia, will be the dominant region in the ongoing century. I have no confidence in the others.

Though the nomenclature is a bit confusing, the "Dragons" used to refer to the East Asian (culturally speaking so Singapore included) countries, and economists have been using "Tigers" for the countries mentioned in this thread. The "Dragons" now are all advanced economies (Singapore, HK & Taiwan among top 10 wealthiest nations by density of millionaires, along with 4 small GCC states, Israel, USA and 1 small European country), data as below:

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Top 10 Weathiest Nations of the World

Either way I agree with you, no matter the "Factory Asia" concept or my priority in "Global South" concept, all would conclude that SE Asia be the up and coming growth engine! However I still have confidence in other regions like Africa, South Asia, Latin America, just that the growth potential there would be slightly less significant.
 
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Though the nomenclature is a bit confusing, the "Dragons" used to refer to the East Asian (culturally speaking so Singapore included) countries, and economists have been using "Tigers" for the countries mentioned in this thread. The "Dragons" now are all advanced economies, data as below:


Either way I agree with you, no matter the "Factory Asia" concept or my priority in "Global South" concept, all would conclude that SE Asia be the up and coming growth engine! However I still have confidence in other regions like Africa, South Asia, Latin America, just that the growth potential there would be slightly less significant.
They can never form a complete industry chain. But ASEAN+East Asia can.
Of course they will grow more and less, even at 10% I won't feel perplexed.
 
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Vietnam, Indonesia, & Malaysia, yes!
But the Philippines? Seriously? Its government is more concerned with living up to American cultural & political agendas than any coherent nation-building plan. Some Pinoys think they're too "hip" to be called "Asians", & prefer the term "Pacific Islanders" (like 'em gangbanging Samoans).
 
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Best wishes to them, but Vietnam..?:coffee:
Last Updated: March 23, 2015

Vietnam Becomes the World Top Outsourcing Location

By David Phillips

NEW YORK CITY—Vietnam has become the world’s top outsourcing location for the first time, according to new research from global real estate adviser Cushman & Wakefield.

Published last week, Cushman & Wakefield’s comprehensive global report, Where in the World? Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) & Shared Service Location Index, assesses factors likely to affect the successful operation of BPO functions around the world.

“While not the cheapest outsourcing destination, Vietnam is still very competitive when compared to other global locations and wage rises in Indiaand China largely contributed to it surging up the ranking to take first place in 2015,” said Cushman & Wakefield’s Head of EMEA and Asia Pacific occupier services, Richard Middleton. “Despite rising costs and concerns that overheating will inevitably lead to further pressure surrounding access to skilled labor, India remains the world’s largest BPO destination by market size.”

Costs, risks and operating conditions are analyzed by the report to give businesses an idea of which markets are particularly attractive in the current global environment.

Vietnam has established its presence in the sector as an alternative destination for low-cost off-shoring services, rising from fifth place last year’s index, C&W says. The country’s government has implemented policies to promote the country as an outsourcing destination, with the services segment expected to expand rapidly.

Rising one place on the 2014 index to take second position this year is the maturingPhilippines BPO market, which has become an established pillar of the country’s economy. The market in fact hit a record US $15 billion in revenue last year, leapfrogging India in terms of growth and absorbing 70% of India’s voice and call center operations. The shift in power has in part been a result of spiraling Indian labor costs and climbing rates of attrition—which stand at 26.9%, the highest globally – as rising wages have left companies continuing to compete for the best talent.

While the global economic recovery has remained a gradual proposition, much of the BPO sector is being driven by English-speaking industrialized nations, placing the Philippines aggressively, ahead of many other BPO locations. The English dialect of the Filipino workforce is also well received within the US.


BPO_Index_2015_TABLE-thumb-780x2157-24924.jpg
Vietnam Becomes Top Outsourcing Location - Daily News Article - GlobeSt.com
 
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Vietnam, Indonesia , Philipine, Malaysia will produce and manufacturing....

Cloths and foot wears
Fruits an lumbers
computers , electronics, cell phones, machinery.
Iron and steel.
gas and oil.
stock and funds,
ship and docking.
Software
sea foods
 
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Indonesia is not a little dragon, since we don't have dragon species in Indonesia.. but we can find Komodo Dragon here...

komodo.jpg
 
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The majority of undeveloped, impoverished countries have small populations with high growth rates, low education, low scientific production, agriculture dependent economies and malnutrition.

Examples include Sierra Leone, Ethiopia and ...

And Vietnam and Philippine
 
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Manufacturing, value added (current US$)
Manufacturing refers to industries belonging to ISIC divisions 15-37. Value added is the net output of a sector after adding up all outputs and subtracting intermediate inputs. It is calculated without making deductions for depreciation of fabricated assets or depletion and degradation of natural resources. The origin of value added is determined by the International Standard Industrial Classification (ISIC), revision 3. Data are in current U.S. dollars.

Manufacturing, value added (current US$) | Data | Table

Country name 2013

China 2,941,337,347,299

United States 1,966,495,000,000

Japan 1,073,277,493,560

Germany 745,240,864,784

Korea, Rep. 370,393,593,514

Italy 287,482,387,812

Brazil 250,149,717,252

France 285,590,357,502

India 223,138,049,899

United Kingdom 231,189,798,427

Russian Federation 267,591,226,274

Indonesia 205,768,427,070

Mexico 215,689,694,253

Canada 162,080,209,810

Turkey 126,169,232,482

Thailand 127,569,680,401

Switzerland 123,855,109,928

Australia 104,170,239,125

Netherlands 93,050,714,496

Sweden 84,367,422,538

Poland 88,003,543,631

Argentina 79,058,057,088

Belgium 66,793,184,246

Austria 70,553,053,432

Malaysia 74,895,426,703

Saudi Arabia 75,536,266,667

Venezuela, RB 50,891,378,335

Singapore 52,577,079,837

South Africa 36,286,004,288

Puerto Rico 48,212,890,163

Ireland 41,430,356,493

Czech Republic 46,603,158,652

Philippines 55,491,790,886

The World Bank Data.
 
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