西方经济界估计中国大约在2028年GDP有可能超过美国

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各个版本都有,另外看到一个版本是预计中国在2020年到2028年,按目前汇率,年平均GDP增长率在5.0%左右,美国在1.5%左右。 如果这么算,基本就在2028年超过

如果算上两者汇率的走势,又会增加中国2028超越概率。人民币走势在8年间继续走强美国还是大概率。现在的人民币汇率已经走强,但没有造成外贸下滑。美国还要一直印美元。

当然我认为有个前提,就是这接下来8年不要发生中国和中等以上强国之间的战争或武统台湾的战争。如果有这样的战争,2028年超越就基本没戏了。



China to overtake US economy by 2028-29 in COVID's wake: JCER​

Forecasts chart next 15 years for India, Vietnam and other key economies
https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F4%2F0%2F0%2F3%2F31073004-1-eng-GB%2F2020-11-30T230125Z_641201755_RC2ZDK9VDNCW_RTRMADP_3_CHINA-ECONOMY-METALS.JPG

Beijing's central business district: China is poised to become a high-income country by 2023 and exceed the U.S. GDP later this decade. © Reuters
MASASHI UEHARA, JCER director and principal economist, and AKIRA TANAKA, senior economistDecember 10, 2020 16:16 JST
TOKYO -- The Chinese economy is likely to surpass that of the U.S. in either 2028 or 2029, as the Asian giant emerges from the coronavirus pandemic in a position of strength, a new study by the Japan Center for Economic Research shows.
The nonprofit organization's sixth annual report on medium-term forecasts -- released on Thursday and titled "Asia in the coronavirus disaster: Which countries are emerging?" -- looks at the impact of COVID-19 across 15 Asia-Pacific economies through 2035.
It covers two main scenarios: a "baseline" or standard scenario, in which the crisis is a transient event like an earthquake, and an "aggravated" scenario that wreaks havoc on structural trends such as globalization, urbanization and innovation. Either way, China's quick success at containing the virus is expected to help it top the U.S. by the end of this decade.

"Due to the impact of the novel coronavirus, many countries are expected to suffer deeply negative growth rates for 2020. But while COVID-19 infections have spread to nearly every country worldwide, not all of them have been affected to the same degree," the report notes. "The differences seen now will make a considerable difference to countries' economic scale 15 years from now."
https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F_aliases%2Farticleimage%2F4%2F4%2F2%2F1%2F31061244-3-eng-GB%2Fnominal-gdp-of-selected-economies.png

In 2020, only China, Vietnam and Taiwan are on track to maintain positive year-on-year growth rates. India's rate is likely to be negative by more than 10%, while the Philippines is expected to see a contraction of more than 8%. Hong Kong, Thailand, Canada, Malaysia and Singapore are all facing gross domestic product shrinkage of more than 6%.
But JCER's baseline scenario assumes that in four to five years, key economic variables return to trends seen before the global health crisis.
Despite China's economic slowdown in recent years, due to demographic challenges and declining investment, its economy is still forecast to be growing at a roughly 3% clip in 2035. In the U.S., sluggish productivity is seen holding the growth rate to about 1% in 2035.
JCER's standard scenario envisions China overtaking America in 2029. And by 2035, China's economic scale, including Hong Kong, would reach $41.8 trillion -- only slightly less than the combined scale of the U.S. and Japan at that point, at $42.3 trillion.
China is poised to become a high-income country even earlier, in 2023, and its income per capita should reach $28,000 in 2035 -- comparable to Taiwan's figure today but still shy of the Chinese government's assumed target of $30,000.
The baseline scenario also paints a bright picture for Vietnam, which is seen maintaining a growth rate of about 6% in 2035, thanks to strong exports. This would propel the Vietnamese economy past Taiwan's in 2035 in terms of scale, and make it the second-largest economy in Southeast Asia after Indonesia. Vietnam is poised to achieve upper middle-income status in 2023, with income per capita approaching $11,000 in 2035.
https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F_aliases%2Farticleimage%2F3%2F5%2F9%2F2%2F31072953-1-eng-GB%2Fnominal-gdp-of-selected-economies%20%281%29.png

Taiwan, for its part, has been one of the most successful economies in fighting the coronavirus pandemic, but its growth rate is projected to drop to 1% in 2035 as a result of its aging population.
Over in India, the current growth rate will slow significantly due to the virus, but the country is likely to experience a rapid recovery and should be capable of achieving 5% growth in 2035.
"By 2033, our baseline scenario has India overtaking Japan in terms of its economic scale, but its income per capita would still not reach the upper middle-income level by 2035," the report says.
The impact of COVID-19, however, could prove to be far deeper and broader -- damaging not only today's economy but also affecting urbanization, trade openness, R&D spending and other factors over the medium term.
JCER's forecasting model draws on labor input, capital input and productivity to project GDP. And productivity is mainly determined by urbanization rates, R&D expenditures and the extent of open trade. So the research center also compiled an "aggravated" scenario that takes more serious coronavirus consequences into account.
The report notes the higher death rates in Europe and North America, as well as the persistent spread of the virus in South and Southeast Asia. In the aggravated scenario, the U.S. and Canada suffer the most damage -- along with India, the Philippines and Indonesia, the three of which count on large numbers of citizens working abroad and sending remittances home.
The report sees urbanization rates lagging behind the standard scenario and argues that "a slowdown in global trade would affect each country's degree of trade openness, while flows of immigrant workers would be obstructed as well."
On the other hand, this scenario assumes that digital innovation would continue to accelerate and that R&D spending would in fact be higher than in the standard scenario, except in the five hardest-hit countries.
The growth rates of the U.S., Vietnam, Singapore and others in 2035 would be significantly lower than those under the standard scenario, largely due to trade blockages. But while China would also be susceptible to the trade downturn, this would be offset by an increase in research outlays. China would thus still emerge in a strong position. Growth rates in Japan and Australia, meanwhile, would pick up thanks to R&D investment.
"All things considered, China's economic scale would surpass that of the U.S. in 2028, a year earlier than under the standard scenario," JCER says. "As of 2035, the gap with the U.S. would widen, bringing the economic scale of China including Hong Kong to $41.8 trillion -- slightly more than the $41.6 trillion for the U.S. and Japan combined."
In this case, India's economic scale would not catch up with Japan's even in 2035, because Japan would grow at a faster rate than under the standard scenario. Vietnam's economic scale in 2035 would still be smaller than that of Taiwan.
As for income per capita, China would enter high-income territory in 2023, as in the standard scenario. Its figure would be $28,000 in 2035, again matching the standard scenario but falling short of the $30,000 level.
 
我还以为明年就超过美国了呢。
 
GDP 已经接近,超越不超越已经不重要了。


美国全民盲目接种mRNA疫苗,其后遗症未知,很可能是生不如死。灭族灭国都有可能。
 
人均一下就傻眼了。

整体实力超过,需要漫长的时间。
 
GDP 已经接近,超越不超越已经不重要了。
美国全民盲目接种mRNA疫苗,其后遗症未知,很可能是生不如死。灭族灭国都有可能。

真心希望美国的mRNA疫苗管用。不过3大疫苗股都跌得稀里哗啦,内部人也在套现,说明市场看到了不同的真相。
 
人均一下就傻眼了。 整体实力超过,需要漫长的时间。

一旦去掉软实力和泡沫,变化就不是线性渐变,而是突变
 
人均一下就傻眼了。

整体实力超过,需要漫长的时间。

能总量超过就很牛了,路要一步一步走。

如果能在接下来8年,没有大的战争,GDP总量年均递增5%,就是烧高香了。
 
中国如果想顺利在2028年GDP登顶,光靠硬指标还不够,还要有SOFT POWER. 就是仁道, 让人心服口服。不要有太多不靠谱的事情,比如下面这个中国政法大学内地女生在中国政法大学北京总部浴室被港澳台留学生和管理官员羞辱的事情。这女生还被封了微博,LOL

要创造更和谐平等自信的社会环境,

 
最后编辑:
到那时候,超过了就超过了,不算什么大事。中国工业产值早就超过美国了,钢铁产量是美国八倍,哪一年超过的,谁都没印象了。
 
清朝当年的GDP还占全世界的1/3呢,CCP连大清都不如, 差远了!
对,能占三分之一的只有清朝和美国这样的国家,美国说不定要follow大清啊。

像华为那样一被封锁就断气的经济结构,还是不要太强大的好。

美国农夫救了这条蛇,蛇醒来以后就吃,壮大到一定规模就准备吃了美国这个农夫。

看了半天,那你瞎激动个什么,清朝那么强大还没吃掉美国呢。
 
路透社版本

2020年12月25日8:06 晚上更新于1 天前

中国2028年将超越美国成全球最大经济体 较之前预估早五年--智库​

路透新闻部

路透伦敦12月26日 - 英国智库经济和商业研究中心(CEBR)指出,中国2028年将超越美国,成为全球最大的经济体,由于新冠疫情使得中美两国复苏情况形成明显反差,这个时间比之前的预估早了五年。

“一段时间以来,全球经济最重要的主题就一直是美国与中国间的经济和软实力较劲。”CEBR在周六公布的年度报告中表示。

“新冠病毒大流行及相应的经济影响,无疑使这场竞争形势开始变得对中国有利。”

CEBR指出,中国初期以严格封锁措施“有效管控了疫情”,但西方的长期增长却遭受打击,这意味着中国的相对经济表现已经提升。

中国2021-25年的年均经济增长率似乎将达到5.7%,2026-30年料年均增长4.5%。

美国经济尽管可能在2021年实现疫情后的强劲反弹,但2022-2024年的年均增长率可能放缓至1.9%,之后进一步放缓至1.6%。

日本仍将是以美元计的全球第三大经济体,直至2030年代初期;届时日本可能被印度取代,而德国的排名将从第四被挤到第五。

根据CEBR的指标,英国目前为全球第五大经济体,到2024年将下滑至第六位。

但是,尽管英国离开欧盟单一市场会使其在2021年受到冲击,但到2035年,英国以美元计的GDP将比法国高出23%,得益于英国在日益重要的数字经济中处于领先地位。

CEBR称,2020年全球10大经济体的经济产出中,欧洲占了19%,但到2035年时将下降至12%;如果欧盟与英国之间水火不容的话,这个占比将更低。

CEBR还表示,疫情对全球经济的影响可能表现在通胀上升,而不是增长减速。

“我们预计2020年代中期将出现升息的经济周期,”CEBR说,这对已经因新冠危机响应措施而大量举债的政府构成一大挑战。

“但当我们进入2030年代,由此加速的基本趋势表明会有更环保、更以科技为基础的世界。”(完)

编译 张若琪/杜明霞/李婷仪 审校 刘秀红/徐文焰/戴素萍

 
PPP早超过米帝了吧

米帝医疗服务GDP其高无比,就是个笑话
尽管瓷器国的GDP有造假,但还有很多统计不到的GDP,

我相信东莞的那种庞大地下三产业肯定没完全计入GDP中
 
各个版本都有,另外看到一个版本是预计中国在2020年到2028年,按目前汇率,年平均GDP增长率在5.0%左右,美国在1.5%左右。 如果这么算,基本就在2028年超过

如果算上两者汇率的走势,又会增加中国2028超越概率。人民币走势在8年间继续走强美国还是大概率。现在的人民币汇率已经走强,但没有造成外贸下滑。美国还要一直印美元。

当然我认为有个前提,就是这接下来8年不要发生中国和中等以上强国之间的战争或武统台湾的战争。如果有这样的战争,2028年超越就基本没戏了。



China to overtake US economy by 2028-29 in COVID's wake: JCER​

Forecasts chart next 15 years for India, Vietnam and other key economies
https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F4%2F0%2F0%2F3%2F31073004-1-eng-GB%2F2020-11-30T230125Z_641201755_RC2ZDK9VDNCW_RTRMADP_3_CHINA-ECONOMY-METALS.JPG

Beijing's central business district: China is poised to become a high-income country by 2023 and exceed the U.S. GDP later this decade. © Reuters
MASASHI UEHARA, JCER director and principal economist, and AKIRA TANAKA, senior economistDecember 10, 2020 16:16 JST
TOKYO -- The Chinese economy is likely to surpass that of the U.S. in either 2028 or 2029, as the Asian giant emerges from the coronavirus pandemic in a position of strength, a new study by the Japan Center for Economic Research shows.
The nonprofit organization's sixth annual report on medium-term forecasts -- released on Thursday and titled "Asia in the coronavirus disaster: Which countries are emerging?" -- looks at the impact of COVID-19 across 15 Asia-Pacific economies through 2035.
It covers two main scenarios: a "baseline" or standard scenario, in which the crisis is a transient event like an earthquake, and an "aggravated" scenario that wreaks havoc on structural trends such as globalization, urbanization and innovation. Either way, China's quick success at containing the virus is expected to help it top the U.S. by the end of this decade.

"Due to the impact of the novel coronavirus, many countries are expected to suffer deeply negative growth rates for 2020. But while COVID-19 infections have spread to nearly every country worldwide, not all of them have been affected to the same degree," the report notes. "The differences seen now will make a considerable difference to countries' economic scale 15 years from now."
https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F_aliases%2Farticleimage%2F4%2F4%2F2%2F1%2F31061244-3-eng-GB%2Fnominal-gdp-of-selected-economies.png

In 2020, only China, Vietnam and Taiwan are on track to maintain positive year-on-year growth rates. India's rate is likely to be negative by more than 10%, while the Philippines is expected to see a contraction of more than 8%. Hong Kong, Thailand, Canada, Malaysia and Singapore are all facing gross domestic product shrinkage of more than 6%.
But JCER's baseline scenario assumes that in four to five years, key economic variables return to trends seen before the global health crisis.
Despite China's economic slowdown in recent years, due to demographic challenges and declining investment, its economy is still forecast to be growing at a roughly 3% clip in 2035. In the U.S., sluggish productivity is seen holding the growth rate to about 1% in 2035.
JCER's standard scenario envisions China overtaking America in 2029. And by 2035, China's economic scale, including Hong Kong, would reach $41.8 trillion -- only slightly less than the combined scale of the U.S. and Japan at that point, at $42.3 trillion.
China is poised to become a high-income country even earlier, in 2023, and its income per capita should reach $28,000 in 2035 -- comparable to Taiwan's figure today but still shy of the Chinese government's assumed target of $30,000.
The baseline scenario also paints a bright picture for Vietnam, which is seen maintaining a growth rate of about 6% in 2035, thanks to strong exports. This would propel the Vietnamese economy past Taiwan's in 2035 in terms of scale, and make it the second-largest economy in Southeast Asia after Indonesia. Vietnam is poised to achieve upper middle-income status in 2023, with income per capita approaching $11,000 in 2035.
https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F_aliases%2Farticleimage%2F3%2F5%2F9%2F2%2F31072953-1-eng-GB%2Fnominal-gdp-of-selected-economies%20%281%29.png

Taiwan, for its part, has been one of the most successful economies in fighting the coronavirus pandemic, but its growth rate is projected to drop to 1% in 2035 as a result of its aging population.
Over in India, the current growth rate will slow significantly due to the virus, but the country is likely to experience a rapid recovery and should be capable of achieving 5% growth in 2035.
"By 2033, our baseline scenario has India overtaking Japan in terms of its economic scale, but its income per capita would still not reach the upper middle-income level by 2035," the report says.
The impact of COVID-19, however, could prove to be far deeper and broader -- damaging not only today's economy but also affecting urbanization, trade openness, R&D spending and other factors over the medium term.
JCER's forecasting model draws on labor input, capital input and productivity to project GDP. And productivity is mainly determined by urbanization rates, R&D expenditures and the extent of open trade. So the research center also compiled an "aggravated" scenario that takes more serious coronavirus consequences into account.
The report notes the higher death rates in Europe and North America, as well as the persistent spread of the virus in South and Southeast Asia. In the aggravated scenario, the U.S. and Canada suffer the most damage -- along with India, the Philippines and Indonesia, the three of which count on large numbers of citizens working abroad and sending remittances home.
The report sees urbanization rates lagging behind the standard scenario and argues that "a slowdown in global trade would affect each country's degree of trade openness, while flows of immigrant workers would be obstructed as well."
On the other hand, this scenario assumes that digital innovation would continue to accelerate and that R&D spending would in fact be higher than in the standard scenario, except in the five hardest-hit countries.
The growth rates of the U.S., Vietnam, Singapore and others in 2035 would be significantly lower than those under the standard scenario, largely due to trade blockages. But while China would also be susceptible to the trade downturn, this would be offset by an increase in research outlays. China would thus still emerge in a strong position. Growth rates in Japan and Australia, meanwhile, would pick up thanks to R&D investment.
"All things considered, China's economic scale would surpass that of the U.S. in 2028, a year earlier than under the standard scenario," JCER says. "As of 2035, the gap with the U.S. would widen, bringing the economic scale of China including Hong Kong to $41.8 trillion -- slightly more than the $41.6 trillion for the U.S. and Japan combined."
In this case, India's economic scale would not catch up with Japan's even in 2035, because Japan would grow at a faster rate than under the standard scenario. Vietnam's economic scale in 2035 would still be smaller than that of Taiwan.
As for income per capita, China would enter high-income territory in 2023, as in the standard scenario. Its figure would be $28,000 in 2035, again matching the standard scenario but falling short of the $30,000 level.
真他么土羊土森破,哪年超过美帝是由咱统计局决定的。
 
PPP早超过米帝了吧

米帝医疗服务GDP其高无比,就是个笑话
尽管瓷器国的GDP有造假,但还有很多统计不到的GDP,

我相信东莞的那种庞大地下三产业肯定没完全计入GDP中
out of curiosity, 加拿大的合法的性产业不知道有没有计入GDP
 
最后编辑:
各个版本都有,另外看到一个版本是预计中国在2020年到2028年,按目前汇率,年平均GDP增长率在5.0%左右,美国在1.5%左右。 如果这么算,基本就在2028年超过

如果算上两者汇率的走势,又会增加中国2028超越概率。人民币走势在8年间继续走强美国还是大概率。现在的人民币汇率已经走强,但没有造成外贸下滑。美国还要一直印美元。

当然我认为有个前提,就是这接下来8年不要发生中国和中等以上强国之间的战争或武统台湾的战争。如果有这样的战争,2028年超越就基本没戏了。



China to overtake US economy by 2028-29 in COVID's wake: JCER​

Forecasts chart next 15 years for India, Vietnam and other key economies
https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F4%2F0%2F0%2F3%2F31073004-1-eng-GB%2F2020-11-30T230125Z_641201755_RC2ZDK9VDNCW_RTRMADP_3_CHINA-ECONOMY-METALS.JPG

Beijing's central business district: China is poised to become a high-income country by 2023 and exceed the U.S. GDP later this decade. © Reuters
MASASHI UEHARA, JCER director and principal economist, and AKIRA TANAKA, senior economistDecember 10, 2020 16:16 JST
TOKYO -- The Chinese economy is likely to surpass that of the U.S. in either 2028 or 2029, as the Asian giant emerges from the coronavirus pandemic in a position of strength, a new study by the Japan Center for Economic Research shows.
The nonprofit organization's sixth annual report on medium-term forecasts -- released on Thursday and titled "Asia in the coronavirus disaster: Which countries are emerging?" -- looks at the impact of COVID-19 across 15 Asia-Pacific economies through 2035.
It covers two main scenarios: a "baseline" or standard scenario, in which the crisis is a transient event like an earthquake, and an "aggravated" scenario that wreaks havoc on structural trends such as globalization, urbanization and innovation. Either way, China's quick success at containing the virus is expected to help it top the U.S. by the end of this decade.

"Due to the impact of the novel coronavirus, many countries are expected to suffer deeply negative growth rates for 2020. But while COVID-19 infections have spread to nearly every country worldwide, not all of them have been affected to the same degree," the report notes. "The differences seen now will make a considerable difference to countries' economic scale 15 years from now."
https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F_aliases%2Farticleimage%2F4%2F4%2F2%2F1%2F31061244-3-eng-GB%2Fnominal-gdp-of-selected-economies.png

In 2020, only China, Vietnam and Taiwan are on track to maintain positive year-on-year growth rates. India's rate is likely to be negative by more than 10%, while the Philippines is expected to see a contraction of more than 8%. Hong Kong, Thailand, Canada, Malaysia and Singapore are all facing gross domestic product shrinkage of more than 6%.
But JCER's baseline scenario assumes that in four to five years, key economic variables return to trends seen before the global health crisis.
Despite China's economic slowdown in recent years, due to demographic challenges and declining investment, its economy is still forecast to be growing at a roughly 3% clip in 2035. In the U.S., sluggish productivity is seen holding the growth rate to about 1% in 2035.
JCER's standard scenario envisions China overtaking America in 2029. And by 2035, China's economic scale, including Hong Kong, would reach $41.8 trillion -- only slightly less than the combined scale of the U.S. and Japan at that point, at $42.3 trillion.
China is poised to become a high-income country even earlier, in 2023, and its income per capita should reach $28,000 in 2035 -- comparable to Taiwan's figure today but still shy of the Chinese government's assumed target of $30,000.
The baseline scenario also paints a bright picture for Vietnam, which is seen maintaining a growth rate of about 6% in 2035, thanks to strong exports. This would propel the Vietnamese economy past Taiwan's in 2035 in terms of scale, and make it the second-largest economy in Southeast Asia after Indonesia. Vietnam is poised to achieve upper middle-income status in 2023, with income per capita approaching $11,000 in 2035.
https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F_aliases%2Farticleimage%2F3%2F5%2F9%2F2%2F31072953-1-eng-GB%2Fnominal-gdp-of-selected-economies%20%281%29.png

Taiwan, for its part, has been one of the most successful economies in fighting the coronavirus pandemic, but its growth rate is projected to drop to 1% in 2035 as a result of its aging population.
Over in India, the current growth rate will slow significantly due to the virus, but the country is likely to experience a rapid recovery and should be capable of achieving 5% growth in 2035.
"By 2033, our baseline scenario has India overtaking Japan in terms of its economic scale, but its income per capita would still not reach the upper middle-income level by 2035," the report says.
The impact of COVID-19, however, could prove to be far deeper and broader -- damaging not only today's economy but also affecting urbanization, trade openness, R&D spending and other factors over the medium term.
JCER's forecasting model draws on labor input, capital input and productivity to project GDP. And productivity is mainly determined by urbanization rates, R&D expenditures and the extent of open trade. So the research center also compiled an "aggravated" scenario that takes more serious coronavirus consequences into account.
The report notes the higher death rates in Europe and North America, as well as the persistent spread of the virus in South and Southeast Asia. In the aggravated scenario, the U.S. and Canada suffer the most damage -- along with India, the Philippines and Indonesia, the three of which count on large numbers of citizens working abroad and sending remittances home.
The report sees urbanization rates lagging behind the standard scenario and argues that "a slowdown in global trade would affect each country's degree of trade openness, while flows of immigrant workers would be obstructed as well."
On the other hand, this scenario assumes that digital innovation would continue to accelerate and that R&D spending would in fact be higher than in the standard scenario, except in the five hardest-hit countries.
The growth rates of the U.S., Vietnam, Singapore and others in 2035 would be significantly lower than those under the standard scenario, largely due to trade blockages. But while China would also be susceptible to the trade downturn, this would be offset by an increase in research outlays. China would thus still emerge in a strong position. Growth rates in Japan and Australia, meanwhile, would pick up thanks to R&D investment.
"All things considered, China's economic scale would surpass that of the U.S. in 2028, a year earlier than under the standard scenario," JCER says. "As of 2035, the gap with the U.S. would widen, bringing the economic scale of China including Hong Kong to $41.8 trillion -- slightly more than the $41.6 trillion for the U.S. and Japan combined."
In this case, India's economic scale would not catch up with Japan's even in 2035, because Japan would grow at a faster rate than under the standard scenario. Vietnam's economic scale in 2035 would still be smaller than that of Taiwan.
As for income per capita, China would enter high-income territory in 2023, as in the standard scenario. Its figure would be $28,000 in 2035, again matching the standard scenario but falling short of the $30,000 level.
不是早就超过美国了吗?你个崇洋媚外的汉奸 :kan: :buttrock:
 
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