Which nation is richer, Belarus or Luxembourg?
If you look at total economic output, you might be tempted to say Belarus. The GDP of Belarus, after all, is almost $72 billion while Luxembourg’s GDP is less than $60 billion.
But that would be a preposterous answer since there are about 9.5 million people in Belarus compared to only about 540,000 folks in Luxembourg.
It should be obvious that what matters is per-capita GDP, and the residents of Luxembourg unambiguously enjoy far higher living standards than their cousins in Belarus.
This seems like an elementary point, but it has to be made because there have been a bunch of misleading stories about China “overtaking” the United States in economic output. Look, for instance, at these excerpts from a Bloomberg report.
China is poised to overtake the U.S. as the world’s biggest economy earlier than expected, possibly as soon as this year… The latest tally adds to the debate on how the world’s top two economic powers are progressing. Projecting growth rates from 2011 onwards suggests China’s size when measured in PPP may surpass the U.S. in 2014.
There are methodological issues with PPP data, some of which are acknowledged in the data, and there’s also the challenge of whether Chinese numbers can be trusted.
But let’s assume these are the right numbers. My response is “so what?”
I’ve previously written that the Chinese tiger is more akin to a paper tiger. But Mark Perry of the American Enterprise Institute put together a chart that is far more compelling than what I wrote. He looks at the per-capita numbers and shows that China is still way behind the United States.
To be blunt, Americans shouldn’t worry about the myth of Chinese economic supremacy.
But that’s not the main point of today’s column.
Instead, I want to call attention to Taiwan. That jurisdiction doesn’t get as much attention as Hong Kong and Singapore, but it’s one of the world’s success stories.
And if you compare Taiwan to China, as I’ve done in this chart, there’s no question which jurisdiction deserves praise.
Yes, China has made big strides in recent decades thanks to reforms to ease the burden of government. But Taiwan is far above the world average while China has only recently reached that level (and only if you believe official Chinese numbers).
So why is there a big difference between China and Taiwan? Well, if you look at Economic Freedom of the World, you’ll see that Taiwan ranks among the top-20 nations while China ranks only 123 out of 152 countries.
By the way, Taiwan has a relatively modest burden of government spending. The public sector only consumes about 21.5 percent of economic output. That’s very good compared to other advanced nations.
Moreover, Taiwan is one of the nations that enjoyed considerable progress by adhering to Mitchell’s Golden Rule. Between 2001 and 2006, total government spending didn’t grow at all.
During this period of fiscal restraint, you won’t be surprised to learn that the burden of government spending fell as a share of GDP.
And it should go without saying (but I’ll say it anyhow) that because politicians addressed the underlying disease of government spending, that also enabled big progress is dealing with the symptom of government borrowing.
Look at what happened to spending and deficits between 2001 and 2006.
P.S. You probably didn’t realize that it was possible to see dark humor in communist oppression.
P.P.S. But at least some communists in China seem to understand that the welfare state is a very bad idea.
P.P.P.S. Some business leaders say China is now more business-friendly than the United States. That’s probably not good news for America, but my goal is to have a market-friendly nation, not a business-friendly nation.
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Yes, Taiwan is doing something right. They have doubled GDP per head since I first visited the country in 1993. Even if they are not producing 50% of the world’s laptops anymore as they did in older days.
“Death knell rings for 142 years of American dominance as China prepares to leap into first place as world’s largest economy”
“A report out of the World Bank indicates that Chinese purchasing power will surpass that of America in 2014”
By Joshua Gardner and Associated Press:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2616806/American-dollar-hits-wall-China-prepares-leap-place-worlds-largest-economy-end-year.html
I fully agree regarding Taiwan. I spend a lot of time there and it’s like being in the future when compared to the UK for example. One of the key things I note with Taiwan is that small food stalls are ubiquitous – so work pays, and there is lots of it, all the economic activity is not hovered up by supermarkets.
secondly, Foxconn, I think this highlights the difference between Asian countries and our present western systems – forward planing and cornering of important markets (microchips etc also see Korea and Graphene). the ground work for this arguably was done during the non democratic era.
Thirdly, immigration. They don’t have a great deal except the English teachers and thai wives, and residency is hard to get unless you marry in. They thus do not have large unproductive populations to support, or massive wage pressure from the ones who at least work.
on the negative side –
house prices. In Taipei the average wage is 50,000 NT. No way you could buy property on that. They have the biggest property bubble in the world.
Leftism – they seem to be embracing leftism more and more.
Dan, the last image needs an explanation of the two colors, I’m guessing 2001 and 2006 because of the previous chart, but it’s not clear…