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by scrlk
1054 days ago
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> I highly doubt they can preserve their pace of growth for next few decades without significant changes to the regime and liberalization. "Demographics is destiny" also comes to mind. Note how the era of "Japan Inc." during the 1980s was also the time when the post-war baby boom population were in their 30s-40s (i.e. peak productive worker population). As this cohort has aged and are now in retirement, Japan's economic performance has tailed off. See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_Japan#/media/F... If you look at the Chinese population pyramid, we could already be at the point of maximum Chinese economic growth: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_China#/media/F... From the geopolitical standpoint, this may also explain why China and Russia have become more belligerent - they will lack sufficient numbers of young fighting aged men in the next few decades. |
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