Rii
Rear Admiral
Mere months after wrenching the title of 'world's top exporter' from Germany, China has officially surpassed Japan as the world's second largest economy.
New York Times
Perhaps anticlimactically, the world continues to turn. Now all that lies ahead for China in the realm of statistical economic masturbation is the long haul to overtake the United States. Might want to get a beer or two to pass the time.
I was going to object to this and say that Japan is Australia's largest trading partner, as that was the case as of last year, but looking at the most recent data (June 2010) it appears that's no longer the case. Seems China displaced Japan as Australia's largest trading partner in the same quarter that it overtook Japan re: GDP. Nifty.
New York Times
SHANGHAI — After three decades of spectacular growth, China passed Japan in the second quarter to become the world’s second-largest economy behind the United States, according to government figures released early Monday.
The milestone, though anticipated for some time, is the most striking evidence yet that China’s ascendance is for real and that the rest of the world will have to reckon with a new economic superpower.
The recognition came early Monday, when Tokyo said that Japan’s economy was valued at about $1.28 trillion in the second quarter, slightly below China’s $1.33 trillion. Japan’s economy grew 0.4 percent in the quarter, Tokyo said, substantially less than forecast. That weakness suggests that China’s economy will race past Japan’s for the full year.
Experts say unseating Japan — and in recent years passing Germany, France and Great Britain — underscores China’s growing clout and bolsters forecasts that China will pass the United States as the world’s biggest economy as early as 2030.
[....]
Assessing what China’s newfound clout means, though, is complicated. While the country is still relatively poor per capita, it has an authoritarian government that is capable of taking decisive action — to stimulate the economy, build new projects and invest in specific industries.
That, Mr. Lardy at the Peterson Institute said, gives the country unusual power. “China is already the primary determiner of the price of virtually every major commodity,” he said. “And the Chinese government can be much more decisive in allocating resources in a way that other governments of this level of per capita income cannot.”
Perhaps anticlimactically, the world continues to turn. Now all that lies ahead for China in the realm of statistical economic masturbation is the long haul to overtake the United States. Might want to get a beer or two to pass the time.
For everyone in China’s region, they’re now the biggest trading partner rather than the U.S. or Japan.”
I was going to object to this and say that Japan is Australia's largest trading partner, as that was the case as of last year, but looking at the most recent data (June 2010) it appears that's no longer the case. Seems China displaced Japan as Australia's largest trading partner in the same quarter that it overtook Japan re: GDP. Nifty.