According
to the news from The Economist, entitled “Economic Convergence: Economic
Headwinds Return”, “Ten years ago, developing economies were catching up with
developed ones remarkably quickly. It was an aberration.”
Reviewing
the decade-and-a-half journey of China from a lagging economy to one that has
surpassed many nations in Europe in terms of average income generation, the
article describes the dire realities that beset the once
sleeping-giant-turned-global-power. Using Hong Kong as the standard by which to
measure economic
growth, average incomes dip to 50% in Shenzhen, to 25% in Guandong and to a
mere 10% in Yunnan. That is an overall average of less than 30% that of Hong
Kong, which is essentially a small dot of an island compared to the gigantic
mainland China teeming with so many millions of people.
The
average annual rate of growth from 2000 to 2009 for developing nations was
7.6%, 4.5% higher than that seen in developed
rich nations. That unprecedented rate practically narrowed down the gap
between the developed and developing countries.
The
once deprived populations of the world, a big majority of whom are found in
Asia and living on less than the global poverty level of $1.25 daily income,
surged on from a share of 30% of the world population in 2000 to less than 10%
as of April 2014, according to the Center for Global Development
based on new date from the World Bank. At that pace, it is estimated that in
only 30 years, the average income per person would converge with that in
America. This is certainly cause for great hope for many people on a global
scale.
Sad to
say, those hopes are now slipping away. An evaluation of data on GDP per person
based on new computations of cost of living released in April by the World
Bank’s International Comparison Programme (ICP) seems to show that convergence
has slowed down drastically.
Since
2008, growth rates across the emerging nations have slowed down and matched
those in developed economies. When the new ICP figures are applied, the average
GDP per capita in the emerging world, measured on a purchasing-power-parity
(PPP) basis, grew just 2.6 percentage points faster than American GDP in 2013.
If China is removed from the estimates, the difference is only 1.1%. At that
rate, convergence with rich-economy incomes will occur in a hundred years or
more, longer than a generation. If China is included, emerging economies could
expect to reach rich-world income levels, on average, in a little over
half-a-century.
Japan,
which achieved industrialization in the first part of the 20th century, grew to
be the world’s second largest economy, next to USA. South Korea, Taiwan and
several city-states like Singapore and Hong Kong also grew and developed into
prosperous nations. The rush to achieve levels of growth close to those of
developing nations became an addiction to these nations and others who needed
to catch up as well. The price paid in terms of investments on human capital
led to social and political problems as some nations had to export their
workers to the industrialized or more prosperous nations. Ironically, the
income generated by those workers help to sustain those nations during the
crises that transpired.
In
trying to explain the growth disparity, economists pointed to institutions
being the key while others focused on “geography and climate”. Moreover, they
said that “remoteness from economic centers and hot, disease-prone conditions
could retard development,” which is the case in many of the Southeast Asian
countries where the issues of rebellion and ethnic differences provide
obstacles to development of the depressed country-sides.
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