Boiling Frog Chronicles Vol CCXXXV111
Ok...Now dat Babylon start yap bout tings man ah tell unnu bout from wheday...Unnu now ave dem permission fi yap bout it tuh.
But some ah unnu need fi si dat pon TV fuss before unnu get get converted to reality
But betta late dan neva
These will be the world's 20 largest economies in 2030
Take a peek at the new world that awaits us
Bloomberg By Jeanna Smialek
Get ready for a new economic order. In the world 15 years from now, the U.S. will be far less dominant, several emerging markets will catapult into prominence, and some of the largest European economies will be slipping behind.
That's according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's latest macroeconomic projections that go out to 2030, displayed in the chart below. The U.S. will just barely remain the global leader, with $24.8 trillion in annual output. The gray bar represents the $16.8 trillion gross domestic product projected for 2015, and the green bar shows how much bigger the economy is expected to be 15 years from now. The country, worth 25 percent of the world economy in 2006 and 23 percent in 2015, will see its share decline to 20 percent.
More from Bloomberg.com: Competing Pressures on Iran Deal Confront Senate Democrats
China's GDP will grow to more than twice its size today, helping the Asian powerhouse to almost entirely close its gap with the U.S. .
Ok...Now dat Babylon start yap bout tings man ah tell unnu bout from wheday...Unnu now ave dem permission fi yap bout it tuh.
But some ah unnu need fi si dat pon TV fuss before unnu get get converted to reality
But betta late dan neva
These will be the world's 20 largest economies in 2030
Take a peek at the new world that awaits us
Bloomberg By Jeanna Smialek
Get ready for a new economic order. In the world 15 years from now, the U.S. will be far less dominant, several emerging markets will catapult into prominence, and some of the largest European economies will be slipping behind.
That's according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's latest macroeconomic projections that go out to 2030, displayed in the chart below. The U.S. will just barely remain the global leader, with $24.8 trillion in annual output. The gray bar represents the $16.8 trillion gross domestic product projected for 2015, and the green bar shows how much bigger the economy is expected to be 15 years from now. The country, worth 25 percent of the world economy in 2006 and 23 percent in 2015, will see its share decline to 20 percent.
More from Bloomberg.com: Competing Pressures on Iran Deal Confront Senate Democrats
China's GDP will grow to more than twice its size today, helping the Asian powerhouse to almost entirely close its gap with the U.S. .
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