Winner
Diverse in Unity
I wouldn't entrust a frozen banana stand to the guys from Goldman Sachs.
Why do people care about their opinion ?
Because they've been so consistently wrong about everything that they must be right at least once?

I wouldn't entrust a frozen banana stand to the guys from Goldman Sachs.
Why do people care about their opinion ?
Yup.A fun fact about future economic predictions (which I might have mentioned before): in the early 70's, with great fanfarre, the Brazilian government released a study with their projections of how the world would like in the year 2000. It would be a tripolar world dominated by the USA, Brazil and the Soviet Union (in this order of importance). They reached this conclusion merely by extrapolating the growth rates of the previous decade. Since the military takeover in 1964, Brazil was growing at an incredible pace, over 12% per year, going from a total backwater to the 7th largest economy in the world by 1970. Of course, after the oil shocks of the 70's and the debt crisis that followed, Brazil never recovered and to this day has the lowest growth rates of all the major emerging economies (despite all the fanfarre - the one thing which remained unchanged).
The moral of the story is predictions that far in time are very hard.
Yes, and your affirmations just further this opinion. But I think we've derailed this thread enough and should get back at it.Mind you, you are the one accusing other people of overestimating the UK.
Japan passing America in the 80s was a big concern because our GDPs were really damn close to one another for a while.
What? That's not true.Japan passing America in the 80s was a big concern because our GDPs were really damn close to one another for a while.
What? That's not true.
There's money in that banana stand.I wouldn't entrust a frozen banana stand to the guys from Goldman Sachs.
Why do people care about their opinion ?
Yeah, that's the benefit of averages, it makes the US look better than it actually is. Take a look at some income distribution indices like GINI for context.While I say this with the benefit of hindsight, it's pretty clear demographically that Japan is and never was capable of overtaking the US by total economic strength, especially when the latter is so much more receptive to immigration.
Also I'm kind of boggling at the last of those PWC figures, since when has the US ever had the highest GDP per capita? I'd thought that the Lichtensteins and the Luxembourgs of the world (if not France, Netherlands, Sweden, etc.) have always had larger incomes per capita. Or am I conflating GDP/capita and income/capita? Is there a worthwhile distinction?
EDIT: USA does indeed rank in top 10 of GDP per capita above every large state save Norway (if it counts), beaten out fairly handily by much smaller states (Qatar, UAE, Singapore etc.). This has always confused knowing how many poor people there are here.
It kind of is. They were not too close, but they were close enough for people to suggest that Japan was on the verge of overtaking the US.
Those people were ridiculous.
What? That's not true.
Look at the numbers, and the growth of Japan in comparison to America in the same time period. Lrn2Economics.
Do me a favour and erase the word "superpower" from your vocabulary. That applies to everybody else too.