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© Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction: The Greatest Ever Economic Change Inaugural Professorial Lecture

© Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

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Page 1: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

© Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd

Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce

September 2012

Introduction: The Greatest Ever Economic Change Inaugural Professorial

Lecture

Page 2: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

ObjectivesTo introduce my Gresham lecture series and show how the industrialisation of the emerging economies compares with other previous major economic changes

Page 3: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

Overview

The theme of the lecture series

Background – my master’s thesis on the first two electronics plants in the Kuala Lumpur area

Growth in the smaller emerging economies of East Asia

Japan – the outlier

Comparison with the so-called discovery of the Americas

Comparison with the industrial revolution

Sneak preview of key points from the next 5 lectures

Page 4: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

My master’s thesis 1973

• First two electronics plants in the Kuala Lumpur area

• Texas Instruments and Motorola

• Set in export duty free zones

• 60% of local expenditure was net social gain to the Malaysian economy using World Bank criteria for cost benefit analysis

• Payoff periods 10 and 12 months respectively

MY CONCLUSION WAS THAT THERE WOULD BE MUCH MORE OF THIS SORT OF INVESTMENT

Page 5: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

Smaller East Asian economies* share of world GDP (using the Maddison measure)

* Asean plus Taiwan

Maddison Data Archive at the Groningen Growth and Development Center at Groningen University

Page 6: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

Japan share of world GDP (using the Maddison measure)

Maddison Data Archive at the Groningen Growth and Development Center at Groningen University

Page 7: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

China’s share of world GDP (using the Maddison measure)

Maddison Data Archive at the Groningen Growth and Development Center at Groningen University

Page 8: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

The greatest ever economic change?Criteria

•Impact on world GDP growth

•Impact on GDP per capita

•Impact on changing economic advantage

•Impact on pressure on natural resources

Page 9: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

The ‘discovery’ of the Americas• Columbus sailed in 1492

• Massive movement of population, mainly from Europe

• Importation of many new plants and substances to Europe

• Genocide and conquest of indigenous peoples

• Impact of extraction of precious metals, especially silver

Page 10: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

World GDP from year 1 to 1820

Millions of Geary-Khamis 1990 dollars

Maddison Data Archive at the Groningen Growth and Development Center at Groningen University

Page 11: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

World GDP per capita from year 1 to 1820

Dollars per head (Geary-Khamis 1990 dollars)

Maddison Data Archive at the Groningen Growth and Development Center at Groningen University

Page 12: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

The industrial revolution

• A range of technological changes affecting a wide range of industries with mechanisation as a common theme

• Affecting agriculture, mining, transport as well as various forms of manufacturing

• Combined with political, economic and legal changes – rule of law, joint stock companies with limited liabilities, capitalism and trade, representative government tending towards democracy and a range of social changes aimed at ameliorating the position of less privileged people in the industrialising economies

Often called ‘The Great Transformation’

Page 13: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

World GDP from year 1 to 1913

Millions of Geary-Khamis 1990 dollars

Maddison Data Archive at the Groningen Growth and Development Center at Groningen University

Page 14: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

Western European GDP per capita from year 1 to 1913

Dollars per head (Geary-Khamis 1990 dollars)

Maddison Data Archive at the Groningen Growth and Development Center at Groningen University

Page 15: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

Rates of world economic growth since 1900

Millions of Geary-Khamis 1990 dollars

Maddison Data Archive at the Groningen Growth and Development Center at Groningen University

Page 16: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

Our slower growth in the West is now translating into less good health and life expectancy

Hong Kong Singapore United Kingdon

GDP per capita, 2012 estimate (1990 Geary-Khamis dollars)

34,874 30,918 22,555

Annual hours worked

2,287 2,307 1,625

Government spending as share of GDP

16.7 17.3 49.8

Top tax rate 15% 20% 50%

Life expectancy 82.2 81.0 80.1

Page 17: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

The next 5 lectures this academic year

• Is growth in the emerging economies additional or will we grow more slowly? – with Thras Moraitis and Michael McWilliams Thursday Oct 15, 2012, 6pm Gresham College

• A new theory of economic growth – with Cebr colleagues Thursday Nov 13, 2012, 6pm Gresham College

• How to make Western economies more competitive Thursday 24 January 2013, 6pm Gresham College

• Will there be a shortage of spending power (a modern reinterpretation of Keynes)? Thursday 28 February 2013 6pm Gresham College

• The winning and losing nations Thursday 21 March 2013 6pm Gresham College

Also ‘Sorting out transport in London’ Wednesday1 May 2013 6pm Museum of London

Page 18: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

World outlook for GDP for large economiesBillions of US dollars, current prices at market exchange rates

Page 19: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

Conclusion• By a range of measures, the industrialisation of the emerging

economies justifies the title ‘the greatest ever economic event’

• Even though growth is likely to slow sharply in China, rising relative prices and a rising exchange rate mean that it will become the world’s largest economy in the 2020s

• But rising population and a likely acceleration of economic growth when its current troubles are over mean that India should eventually overtake China around 2050

• One can get a glimpse of how the emerging economies will behave when they get richer by looking at Singapore and Hong Kong

• These examples show the cost to the UK from maintaining the anti-business, tax and spend approach – which has moved from affecting our relative wealth to affecting our health as well

• If the UK does not reform its attitude to growth, to stop treating it as an optional extra, then we will go down the same route as Greece, if a bit more gently

Page 20: © Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce September 2012 Introduction:

© Centre for Economics and Business Research ltd

Contact:

Douglas McWilliams, Mercers’ School Memorial Gresham Professor of Commerce

and Chief Executive, Cebr

[email protected]

020 7324 2850

The Greatest Ever Economic Change