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[Serious] When will China exceed the US in aggregate nominal GDP?
I'm still hopeful that we'll get some real mods in here soon to give me a PCR before I end up seeing double deities. Poor MikeH doesn't even know how to do that sort of thing...
He still manages to post less than you. You came back, what, six months ago and you've made 3000 posts since then?
I have 450 posts in the Fantasy Football thread, 583 in the NFL thread, and 401 in the music thread. My posts are surprisingly concentrated in a few topics.
"Flutie was better than Kelly, Elway, Esiason and Cunningham." - Ben Kenobi
"I have nothing against Wilson, but he's nowhere near the same calibre of QB as Flutie. Flutie threw for 5k+ yards in the CFL." -Ben Kenobi
Danny-boy, you've really managed to make a fool of yourself here.
The question "when will China exceed the US in aggregate nominal GDP" ONLY HAS ONE ****ING MEANING. It is NOT dependent on CPI, PPP or any other ****ing "real" conversion/deflator.
You are one dumb son of a *****.
Take your happy pills and come back when you are finally adressing the point I am making: in order to compare the point when China will slow down with the point when Japan started to slow down you need to adapt for both the PPP and the CPI.
BTW, Drake is still attached to your arse. Remove hmim or he might cause an infection.
PPP GDP per capita (IMF):
US: 45,900
Japan: 32,500
S. Korea: 27,900
China: 6,700
Taiwan (FYI): 31,700 (nearly up to Japan!)
China is approaching that 7000 mark where 31 of 40 countries had their growth slowed by an average of 2.8 percentage points upon hitting it. If China's current GDP growth per capita is under 9% (accounting for population growth), then, assuming averages play out, you're talking maybe 6% growth looking forward.
So now that China has surpassed the magical $7000 PPP mark, it should be slowing down dramatically. Right Alby?
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