Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 31 – New International
Monetary Fund projections suggest that by the middle of the new decade, Russia
will fall further behind almost all other countries, not just those it has
traditionally viewed as ahead of it but even those it never imagined might
surpass it, Rosbalt commentator Sergey Shelin says.
In 2014, 15 countries had a nominal
GDP of more than a trillion dollars. Russia’s was 2.06 trillion US dollars,
that of the US 8.5 times larger and that of China five times. But in 2024,
Shelin says, the IMF projects there will be 17 countries in this category and
Russia will have fallen further behind (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2019/12/31/1821016.html).
Russia’s GDP in that year is
projected to be 1.94 trillion. The US GDP will be 13 times larger, and China’s
11 times. Not a pretty picture, and so
Moscow prefers to use the purchasing power parity ratings – but even there, the
situation for Russia over this decade is anything but bright.
In 2014, there were 12 countries with
a GDP measured in this way with economies larger than two trillion US
dollars. Russia’s amounted to 3.9
trillion US dollars. That amounted to 5.5 percent of all these economies and
meant that the US economy was 4.5 time that of the Russian and the Chinese 4.7
time.
The situation in 2024 is projected to
be much worse as far as Russia is concerned. Then, the number of countries with
two trillion plus GDPs will be 18. Russia’s will be 5.29 trillion US dollars;
but it will form only 3.8 percent of the economies of this group. Moreover,
China’s economy will be 7.5 times larger, the US 4.9 times, and India’s 3.4 times.
This reflects the fact, Shelin says,
that the Russian economy is growing far more slowly than most of the others.
Only three in this group – Brazil, Japan and Italy – are growing more slowly.
One way to grasp what this means: in 2014, Russia’s economy stood at 97.4
percent of Portugal’s. In 2024, it will be “90 percent if not less.”
That is unfortunate, of course, “but
much more serious is the situation with regard to those enormous countries
about whose residents it has been customary to assume that they will always be
poorer than [Russians],” the Rosbalt commentator continues. They are rapidly catching up and soon will be
in a position to surpass Russia.
The number of countries with 100
million residents or more is slated to increase from 12 to 15. In all of them
except Russia, the number of residents will rise. Most of these will remain very poor, but
several of them, like Egypt, are closing the per capita gap with Russia over
this decade.
The situation in “the former younger
brothers” of Russia, “the former union republics and countries of the socialist
camp,” is also moving against Russia. Between
2014 and 2014, only one – Belarus – will see its GDP in parity prices fall
relative to Russia. In the others, it will increase and in some cases dramatically.
These countries fall into four
groups. In the first, which includes Ukraine, Georgia, Mongolia, Moldova, and
Uzbekistan, per capita GDPs will remain fall behind Russia’s but less far
behind than now. In the second, including
Kazakhstan, Romania, and Bulgaria, they will surpass Russia’s.
In the third, including Latvia,
Hungary and Poland, they will significantly surpass Russia’s from being just
behind in 2014. And in the fourth, including Estonia, Lithuania and the Czech
Republic, they will go from being higher than Russia’s in 2014 to much higher
in 2024. In sum, no matter how one looks
at the data, Russia is falling behind.
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