万花筒 2011-04-30&05-03 中国2016年成世界第一大经济体!?(在线收听

 According to that IMF forecast, China's economy could overtake that of US to become the world's biggest by 2016. That is much earlier than previous predictions, some of which called it for 2030 or as late as 2050. Now let me take you through the new forecast for the Chinese and the US economies. They are based on purchasing power parity, which is basically a way of comparing what people earn and spend in real terms. The IMF says China's economy will grow from $11.2 trillion this year to, in 2016, to $19 trillion. That's a growth of about $8 trillion in total. Meantime, the US, well, that is forecast to go from about $15.2 trillion in 2011. In 2016, supposed to go up to $18.8 trillion. That's only about $3.5 trillion there. So what does that mean as part of the world economy. Well, by 2016, well, China would be responsible for about 18% of total world output. And that would like to keep rising. The US for its part would only account for 17.7% of total world output. And you know, just remember, it was just last year that China overtook Japan as the world's second largest economy. So if the IMF forecast holds, it would be a great economic leap forward for China going from No.3 to No.1, and of course toppling the US in just 6 years. 

 
Extraordinary speed when you look at it like that, but as you point it out, there are different dates floating around for when China will become the No.1 economy. That doesn't seem to be any doubt. It will. It is just a matter of when. So how credible is this 2016 deadline from the IMF. I mean they are talking about measuring in purchasing power parity, aren't they?
 
Yeah, that's right. They are talking about that. And I did speak with Frederic Neumann just a short while ago. He is a HSBC's managing director of Asian Economics Research. He told me 2016 is actually a credible time frame, especially of course because it's coming from the IMF itself. But he also said there are other ways and perhaps better ways to measure economies. The IMF here did use purchasing power parity. Let's take a listen.
 
"For one is to measure an economy's output in US dollar terms, not a PPP terms as the IMF has done, which is a measure of purchasing power that local households have, just to look at that in US dollar terms, and here it would take much longer for the Chinese economy to overtake the US, probably 2025 or thereabouts, when we see finally China coming close to the US. And that's a better gage for international purchasing power. But the other relevant measure is per capita income. And that's ultimately what everybody really counts on. And per capita income will take a long time in China to catch up with US prosperity."
 
And Neumann said that on that measure by per capita income, China would overtake the US only in the 2040s or the 2050s. Regardless, Adrew, whether it's then or in five years from now, it's not a question of if China will surpass the US but when and we will be talking about this again and again until it does.
  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/wanhuatong/2011/173706.html