Can America retain the number UNO in economy?

“You know, my friends and relatives in the states still believe that the U.S. is the greatest place in the world,” explained an American in Melbourne, Australia. “They think the rest of the world is full of poor people who can’t wait to emigrate to the U.S. They need to get out more.”

So we get out. We open our eyes. We look around, and what do we see? We see a whole world full of people who are hustling and bustling, schlepping and trying to gain an advantage, each looking for a way to get richer, faster.

The motivations all over the world are about the same. People generally want wealth, power and status and they want to get it in the easiest possible way but it can mean different things to different people. They go about it differently too. In the mature economies, they look for subsidies and angles. Tax breaks. Bailouts. Boondoggles. Sinecures.

“We have plenty of corruption here in India, too,” a colleague noted. “But most people know they can’t get much from the government. They have no choice. They have to start a business or get a job.”

Nothing stands still. A few years ago, the Russians, the Indians and the Chinese were all very helpfully sitting on the sidelines. With their goofy theories and their counterproductive policies, they posed no competition. Americans found it easy to feel superior. Half the world had tied its hands behind its back.
But in the ’70s and ’80s, things began to change. “To get rich is glorious,” said Deng Xiaoping.
“Perestroika,” said Gorbachev. And now they’re all at it. Indians, Brazilians, Turks, Indonesians. They all have faster growth rates and much less debt than the developed countries. China and Turkey are both growing about five times faster than the U.S. India, Brazil and a dozen other countries aren’t far behind.
The latest test scores show Chinese math students in Shanghai far ahead of Americans. And the latest reports tell us Chinese trains are setting records for speed at 300 mph.

Nothing is off limits. No industry is safe. Nobody can expect a free lunch forever.

In India, we rode in a Nano, the car Tata Motors is selling for $2,500. It was a little loud…but surprisingly spacious and comfortable. For getting around town, it seems perfectly adequate. And soon it will be available in the US. How will Detroit compete with these guys on the low end? And on the high end, there’s plenty of competition too from Japan and Germany.

Isn’t Germany a mature economy? Well, yes and no. Germany’s factories and infrastructure were flattened in WWII. It had to rebuild from the bottom up. Its post-war government was completely new. Its currency just came out less than 10 years ago. Besides that, a large piece of present-day Germany lived under the heel of the Soviets for 45 years. They had a close-hand look at what central planning can do to an economy.

America’s government, meanwhile, has been in business since 1776. Its economy has been the biggest in the world for the last 110 years. It was the only major combatant in WWII to come out the other end with its wartime plant and equipment intact. It has had the world’s richest people and the most gold for many years.

“Nothing fails like success,” is one of our Daily Reckoning dicta. Will it fail now, or later? We don’t know. Readers are urged to get out more and draw their own conclusions.

Re: Can America retain the number UNO in economy?

All 'civilizations' have a peak and then they fall, "when" is the question. Everybody else can day-dream about taking the UNO spot, there is no charge for that

Re: Can America retain the number UNO in economy?

They will retain the number one spot for at least the next few decades. China will slowly but surely surpass them. India on the other hand, according to business week, is 163 years behind China and thus has no chance what so ever of becoming number one in the foreseeable future.

Re: Can America retain the number UNO in economy?

People still want to come to America for its diverse work place, best minds from all over the world, world class universities, top class faculty who work extremely hard and are some of the brightest minds, equality of gender, moving towards equality in terms of race, a good blend of practical and theoretical knowledge (folks can fix their cars, do maintenance work around their homes), polite and courteous treatment of workers at all levels. Yes, there are lots of ills that need fixing - but America is still a vibrant place where hard work has maximum chance of getting a person ahead.

Re: Can America retain the number UNO in economy?

I thought they have lost it already :chai:

Re: Can America retain the number UNO in economy?

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America’s government, meanwhile, has been in business since 1776. Its economy has been the biggest in the world for the last 110 years. It was the only major combatant in WWII to come out the other end with its wartime plant and equipment intact. It has had the world’s richest people and the most gold for many years.
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I think yankee's can sustain 50 more years as the world top economy. But the real question is, can China or Indian's are capable enough to fill the vaccume.

Re: Can America retain the number UNO in economy?

abdeyuuki They will retain the number one spot for at least the next few decades. China will slowly but surely surpass them. India on the other hand, according to business week, is 163 years behind China and thus has no chance what so ever of becoming number one in the foreseeable future.

China retain number one spot..cause is population. India is still in the list of under-develop country...