Obama
slips down Forbes' power rankings
Barack
Obama has became the first sitting United States president to slip
out of the top two places Forbes
magazine's
power rankings.
5
November, 2015
Russian
president Vladimir Putin has topped Forbes' annual list of the most
powerful people in the world for the third year in a row, but Mr
Obama has been relegated to third place by Angela Merkel.
The
German chancellor is one of only nine women who made the cut.
The
magazine explained that Mr Obama's influence is shrinking as he
enters the final year of his presidency, while Mr Putin is one of the
few people in the world powerful enough to do what they want.
Pope
Francis is fourth on the list and China's president Xi Jinping comes
fifth.
Thirty
people on the list of 73 are from the United States, eight are from
China, and four each from Japan and Russia.
How
do they make the cut?
To
create the list, Forbes measured people's power "along four
dimensions".
The
first, was whether they had power over a lot of people (Pope Francis,
number four on the list, is the spiritual leader of more than a
billion Catholics.)
Next
they considered the amount of financial resources they controlled
(for heads of state that meant GDP), and finally whether the
candidate was powerful in multiple spheres.
The
magazine said Mr Putin's approval ratings reached a high of 89
percent in June.
In
October, Moscow bombed Islamic State forces in Syria and then met
face-to-face with the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, making the US
and NATO look weak, and helping rebuild Russian influence overseas.
Mrs
Merkel, who jumped up from fifth place last year, is the backbone of
the 28-member European Union, and her decisive actions dealing with
the Syrian refugee problem and the Greek credit crisis helped bump
her up the list.
Forbes said that although the United States was still the world's greatest economic, cultural, diplomatic, technological and military power, Mr Obama's influence was shrinking.
He
struggled to get things done at home, where his approval ratings were
under 50 percent. And internationally, he was outshined by Mrs Merkel
in Europe, and outmanoeuvered by Mr Putin in the Middle East.
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