What's The Real Size Of China's Economy?


(MENAFN- Asia Times) (Big time) I'm on my way, I'm making it (Big time)

(Big time) I've got to make it show, yeah (Big time)

(Big time) So much larger than life

(Big time) I'm gonna watch it growing (Big time)

– Peter Gabriel

In May, the World bank concluded one of its periodic International Comparison Program (ICP) assessments – the price survey which“officially” determines purchasing power parity GDP.

Like college rankings, the league table of the world's largest economies shifted just enough for the obsessives to notice while springing no real surprises. Harvard will be Harvard and whether Princeton ranks above or below Yale this year is largely irrelevant.

For the obsessives, China's lead versus the US expanded by 5.6%, India inched closer to China, Japan kept its ranking while sliding down a tick, Russia moved ahead of Germany, France ahead of the UK, Indonesia tumbled two places and Brazil rose one spot. The top 10 remained the top 10.

While Russia fans can beat their chest over a 13% increase in PPP GDP and the British may fret about dropping out of the top 10, all said, the latest ICP did not produce any remarkable revelations. Nor should it have.

Periodic pricing surveys are necessary to calibrate and maintain the accuracy of PPP adjustments. However, if they result in significant shifts, either too much time has elapsed between surveys or methodologies have broken down.

The ICP is a massive undertaking. According to The Economist, World Bank researchers visited 16,000 shops in China alone to collect price data. The latest ICP assessment collected data in 2021, four years after the 2017 survey. And the conclusion is that China's GDP was undervalued by US$1.4 trillion pushing China's 2022 PPP GDP from 119% of the US to 125%.

According to the Economist, China's National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) was not impressed, downplaying the results stating,“We need to interpret the... results with caution and correctly grasp the global economic landscape and the status of each economy in it” while stressing China remained a“developing economy.” If the NBS did not like such a modest upward adjustment to China's PPP GDP, it will surely hate the rest of this article.

China's PPP GDP is only 25% larger than that of the US? Come on people... who are we kidding? Last year, China generated twice as much electricity as the US, produced 12.6 times as much steel and 22 times as much cement. China's shipyards accounted for over 50% of the world's output while US production was negligible. In 2023, China produced 30.2 million vehicles, almost three times more than the 10.6 million made in the US.

On the demand side, 26 million vehicles were sold in China last year, 68% more than the 15.5 million sold in the US. Chinese consumers bought 434 million smartphones, three times the 144 million sold in the US. As a country, China consumes twice as much meat and eight times as much seafood as the US. Chinese shoppers spent twice as much on luxury goods as American shoppers.

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Asia Times

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