America:
your days as a global superpower are numbered
We've
seen it before: the Roman empire fell, then the British. America's
economic dominance could be about to end - and China is taking its
place.
Photo: Alamy
12
September, 2014
They
say what goes up must come down. It’s been true of every global
superpower throughout history, and now it’s coming to America.
Within
the next five years, China could account for a larger share of global
GDP than any other country and knock the US off its perch as the
world’s biggest economy, according to analysts at Deutsche Bank.
“Based
on current trends China’s economy will overtake America’s in
purchasing power terms within the next few years,” Tim Reid of
Deutsche Bank wrote in a research note. “Given this analysis it
strikes us that today we are in the midst of an extremely rare
historical event – the relative decline of a world superpower.”
r.”
The
US’ economic prowess has been waning since the 1950s, but the
downturn has sharpened over the last 15-or-so years. Part of this is
due to internal political and economic issues in the US. Political
polarization
in the US is at its highest level in decades, economic
confidence
is drooping and most Americans are no longer in favour of
international
military intervention
- once one of the pillars of American freedom and might.
As
Reid points out, America’s share of world output, on a purchasing
power parity basis, has already slipped below 20pc, which has
historically been the marker of a global superpower, from the Roman
to the British empires.
But
this is not just the story of America’s decline. China is on the
way up - and could account for more of global GDP than the US by
2018, according to the IMF's World Economic Outlook index.
Another
report, released earlier this week, said that China's nominal GDP
will overtake that of the US by 2024, buoyed by a
three-fold increase
in consumer spending.
“China
has begun to return to the position in the global economy it occupied
for millenia before the industrial revolution,” Reid wrote, adding
that China is on its way to overcoming the “centuries-long economic
underperformance” that has held it back until recently.
. Highcharts Cloud Beta
Of course, size isn’t everything. The report also points out that America’s global footprint - from McDonald’s to Hollywood - faces little threat from China, which still has internal problems such as poverty to address before looking outwards. At least on this count, though, America will no longer be number one.
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