Why new
world order
in 2050 may
be very
similar to
today's
They say
developing
countries
are set to
overtake
economic
giants such
as the US.
Don't be too
sure.
By Gwynne
Dyer
30/07/08
"The
Scotsman' --
- YOU HAVE
to hand it
to the
economics
team at
Goldman
Sachs. It
was they who
came up with
the concept
of the "BRICs":
the four
countries –
Brazil,
Russia,
India and
China – that
were going
to catch up
with and
then
overtake the
big
economies of
the de
More
recently,
they added
the "Next
11":
middle-sized
developing
countries
such as
Turkey,
Indonesia
and Mexico
that will
also grow
fast enough
to overtake
their
old-rich
counterparts
in the next
generation.
Back in
2006,
Goldman
Sachs
predicted
the Chinese
economy
would
surpass that
of the
United
States in
the early
2040s, with
the Indian
economy not
far behind.
But now the
Goldman
Sachs team
have put out
a new set of
forecasts.
The Chinese
economy,
they
predict,
will
overtake the
US economy
in about
2025, not in
the 2040s,
and will be
twice as big
by 2050.
India's
economy by
2050 will
still be
slightly
smaller than
that of the
US, but the
economies of
Brazil,
Russia,
Indonesia
and Mexico
will all be
bigger than
that of the
next-largest
old-rich
country,
Britain.
The changes
in the
pecking
order are
equally
dramatic
further
down.
Turkey's
economy in
2050 will be
bigger than
Japan's,
France's or
Germany's,
and both
Nigeria and
the
Philippines
will have
larger
economies
than Canada
and Italy.
Korea, Iran
and Saudi
Arabia will
all have
bigger
economies
than Spain.
The
predicted
changes in
per capita
income by
2050 are
less
radical,
though still
impressive.
The US and
the UK will
be neck and
neck at the
top, just as
they are
now, with
Canada only
slightly
behind. The
Koreans will
be
substantially
richer than
the Japanese
– $80,000
(£40,000)
per annum
versus
$63,000 –
and the
Chinese will
still bring
up the rear
in East Asia
with a mere
$50,000 a
year.
But hang on
a minute –
$50,000 a
year is
slightly
higher than
the present
per capita
income in
the US or
Britain. In
2050, there
will be
around one
and a half
billion
Chinese, and
if they have
an average
per capita
income of
$50,000 a
year, then
most of them
will be
leading a
fairly
lavish
middle-class
lifestyle.
How is this
compatible
with what we
know about
the world's
resources of
energy, food
and other
commodities,
and about
the likely
course of
climate
change?
Goldman
Sachs is
providing
surprise-free
projections
of current
trends. This
is a useful
exercise,
because it
sets the
larger
framework in
which the
inevitable
surprises
will take
place. But
that is all
it is,
because no
40-year
stretch of
history is
free of
surprises.
In the past
40 years, we
have seen
the rise to
great wealth
of the
oil-exporting
states of
the Arabian
peninsula,
but a crash
in the
predicted
Iranian
growth rate
after the
1979
revolution.
We have seen
the
disappointment
of the high
expectations
most people
held for
newly
independent
African
countries in
the 1960s,
and the
sudden high
growth rates
of most
Asian
countries in
the 1980s
and 1990s.
We have seen
the collapse
of the
Soviet
empire and
the
expansion of
the European
Union into
Eastern
Europe.
Few economic
analysts in
1968
predicted
any of this,
any more
than they
foresaw
globalisation,
the internet
or the rise
of the euro.
History does
not run on
rails, and
none of
those things
was certain
to happen
(though some
had a much
higher
probability
of happening
than
others). The
same applies
to the
relationship
between the
present and
the future.
Goldman
Sachs is
offering us
a point of
departure
for thinking
about the
future, not
a map of it.
So, what are
some of the
things that
could derail
this simple
picture of a
richer
future, in
which the
gap between
rich and
poor has
narrowed
sharply,
except for
Africa?
A mere
shortage of
oil or other
commodities
wouldn't
change the
pecking
order much,
although it
might lower
everybody's
average
income
(except in
the
commodity-exporting
countries).
Local
political
upheavals
might knock
specific
countries
out of the
running,
like Iran in
the 1980s or
Russia in
the 1990s,
but that
wouldn't
change the
broader
picture
either.
The one
"known
unknown"
that could
do that is
large-scale
climate
change,
because it
would strike
some
countries
much harder
than others,
at least in
the early
phase. And
the
hardest-hit
countries
would
include most
of those
that are now
climbing
rapidly in
the
rankings.
Countries in
the tropics
and the
sub-tropics
are likely
to be hit
early and
hard by
climate
change,
while most
of those in
the
temperate
climate zone
will suffer
relatively
little until
a good deal
later in the
process.
Countries
such as
Turkey,
Mexico,
Indonesia,
India and
Iran will
suffer
diminished
rainfall and
declining
food
production,
and even
China,
although
mostly in
the
temperate
zone, will
struggle as
the glaciers
on the
Tibetan
plateau that
feed most of
its major
rivers melt
away.
Since the
countries
that suffer
least, such
as the US,
Canada,
Britain,
France,
Germany,
Russia and
Japan, are
also the
ones that
produced
most of the
greenhouse-gas
emissions
that have
caused the
current
warming,
this will
probably
result in
some very
bitter
exchanges
between
North and
South. But
it also
means that
the economic
pecking
order in
2050 may be
less
different
from today's
than Goldman
Sachs
predicts.
• Gwynne
Dyer's
latest book,
After Iraq,
was
published by
Yale
University
Press.
