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Its not difficult to see why
Peru's growth rate is 5.5%. Pakistan's 3.7%
Russia @ 15 spot !!!!
What a prediction man..
By Kevin Voigt, CNN
The global research department of HSBC has released a report predicting the rise and fall of the worlds economies in the next 40 years.
The worlds top economy in 2050 will be China, followed by the United States. No surprises there since Chinas reforms in the 1980s, economists have said its not a question of if, but when, Chinas collective economic might will top the U.S.
But among the smaller, developing nations, there are several surprises by HSBC prognosticators:
* By 2050, the Philippines will leapfrog 27 places to become the worlds 16th largest economy.
* Perus economy, growing by 5.5% each year, jumping 20 places to 26th place ahead of Iran, Columbia and Switzerland. Other strong performers will be Egypt (up 15 places to 20th), Nigeria (up nine places to 37th), Turkey (up six spots to 12th), Malaysia (up 17 to 21st) and the Ukraine (up 19 to 45th).
* Japans working population will contract by a world-top 37% in 2050 yet HSBC economists predict it will still be toward the top performing economies, dropping only one spot to the 4th largest economy. India will jump ahead of Japan to 3rd on the list.
* The big loser in the next 40 years will be advanced economies in Europe, HSBC predicts, who will see their place in the economic pecking order erode as working population dwindles and developing economies climb. Only five European nations will be in the top 20, compared to eight today. Biggest drop will be felt northern Europe: Denmark to 56th ( -29), Norway to 48th ( -22), Sweden to 38th (-20) and Finland to 57th (-19).
HSBC 2050 list of top economies (change in rank from 2010)
1) China (+2)
2) U.S. (-1)
3) India (+5)
4) Japan (-2)
5) Germany (-1)
6) UK (-1)
7) Brazil (+2)
8) Mexico (+5)
9) France (-3)
10) Canada (same)
11) Italy (-4)
12) Turkey (+6)
13) S. Korea (-2)
14) Spain (-2)
15) Russia (+2)
16) Philippines (+27)
17) Indonesia (+4)
18) Australia (-2)
19) Argentina (2)
20) Egypt (+15)
21) Malaysia (+17)
22) Saudi Arabia (+1)
23) Thailand (+6)
24) Netherlands (-9)
25) Poland (-1)
26) Peru (+20)
27) Iran (+7)
28) Colombia (+12
29) Switzerland (-9)
30) Pakistan (+14)
If we step away from the cyclicality, there are two ways economies can grow; either add more people to the production line via growth in the working population, or make each individual more productive, the report says.
In other words, demographics the size of your working population along with the opportunities to flex that muscle help determine long-term economic trends. Big factors on the back half of that equation: Education opportunities, democratic governments or strong rule of law (a caveat that explains China and Saudi Arabias high placement).
We openly admit that behind these projections we assume governments build on their recent progress and remain solely focused on increasing the living standards for their populations, the report says. Of course, this maybe an overly glossy way of viewing the world.
Chief factors that may derail economies moving forward, the report says: War, energy consumption constraints, climate change, and growing barriers to population movement across borders.
World
And shopar pawar India at No. 3 - That's ridicules
http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-affairs/94746-india-likely-world-s-no-1-economy-2050-citi.html
This ranking makes no sense. Oh wits ''ait its HSBC ranking, typical Chinese quality
I know right?? HSBC the second largest bank in the world, what would they know about the economy?I don't know who made this list but surely he didn't know a damn thing about economy.Russia at 15?Behind Turkey?Philippines at 16?seriously.
And about Iran.although being under tough sanctions,Iran is currently 18th largest economy.If sanctions lifted today,Iran,with huge natural resources will become one of the 12 largest economies in 2025.We can't talk about 2050.Imagine in 60s,who could predict that South Korea is going to have such a large economy today?or even about china,or India or Mexico.We hardly can predict world economics within 1 year,and now they are predicting this in 38 years.