Essayer OR - Gratuit
Growth economies are catching up with legacy economies
The Sunday Guardian
|November 10, 2024
The growth economies are only a few decades old. They are overcoming the hurdles of their colonized past. Now their influence is growing in a world order which hasn't kept their interest at the core.
Power equations, national strengths, economic influence change over decades. The changes are often noticed after they have occurred.
New realities are recognized belatedly and often reluctantly.
The key players in the global economy can be divided into two categories now. The legacy economies and the growth economies.
Legacy economies are mostly in North America and Western Europe.
Legacy economies have been dominant for a few centuries. Most of them grew by exploitation of colonies and by converting the extracted wealth to fuel their own future. Even in the post-colonial world, their strength and influence allowed them to create a world order suited to their interests. Their growth rate ranges from 1-4%.
The growth economies are only a few decades old. They are overcoming the hurdles of their colonized past. They are fighting against the odds in a world order which doesn't keep their interest at the core. They are a bit more disparate lot, spread across South America, Asia and Africa. But their growth rate is between 5-7%.
The relationship between these two groups have been lopsided. Legacy economies produced while the rest of the world consumed.
Legacy economies prefer that growth economies rise to the level of being good consumers. Growth economies are celebrated as long as they consume the products and services of the legacy economies. But the tipping point appears when growth economies become strong enough to produce for themselves and compete with legacy economies.
Countries that were champions of globalization for decades are now discovering their ill-effects. For them, globalization has a simple definition. Legacy economies must be the dominant producers and other economies must be the pliant consumers. If other economies grow strong enough to produce and compete globalization will be in danger. Now North America and Western Europe are walking back from their unbridled support to globalization.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition November 10, 2024 de The Sunday Guardian.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Sunday Guardian
The Sunday Guardian
SOVEREIGNTY CONCERNS AFTER MUSK'S STARLINK ACTS IN IRAN
The concern is not that people might access the internet during a shutdown, but that a lawful executive order of Government of India could, in practice, be nullified by a foreign commercial satellite network.
3 mins
January 18, 2026
The Sunday Guardian
Genocide in Kashmir forgotten and buried
A painful reckoning with Kashmir’s forgotten genocide and India’s moral failure.
6 mins
January 18, 2026
The Sunday Guardian
From Begumpet to Mysuru, Congress has long history of tarmac politics
Congress and airport tarmac have a long history as in 1990 the then Congress chief Rajiv Gandhi dismissed Karnataka Chief Minister Veerendra Patil, a popular Lingayat leader at an airport, and also publicly rebuked at an airport the then Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister T. Anjaiah.
3 mins
January 18, 2026
The Sunday Guardian
Electronics manufacturing leads PLI scheme as output jumps 146%
Electronics manufacturing, especially of mobile phones, has emerged as a standout performer, in the Performance Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme, with production rising 146% from Rs 2.13 lakh crore in the Financial Year 2021 to Rs 5.45 lakh crore in Financial Year 2025, as per the data shared by the CareEdge Ratings.
2 mins
January 18, 2026
The Sunday Guardian
Police confirm death of teenager in Malappuram as rape-murder
The police on Saturday confirmed that a 16-year-old girl, whose body was recovered from Thodiyapalam near a railway track in this district, was raped and murdered.
2 mins
January 18, 2026
The Sunday Guardian
CANADA BETWEEN EMPIRES: CARNEY, CHINA AND THE PRICE OF STRATEGIC AUTONOMY
Carney’s Beijing visit was neither a pivot nor a betrayal. It was a hedge, undertaken in full view of its risks. The new world order Carney described is not one Canada would have chosen. But it is the one we must now navigate carefully, sceptically, and without illusions.
5 mins
January 18, 2026
The Sunday Guardian
UKRAINIAN DELEGATION IN U.S. WILL GIVE FULL PICTURE OF RUSSIAN ATTACK: ZELENSKYY
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy shared on Saturday that the Ukrainian delegation has arrived in the United States with the main task being to present a ‘full picture’ of the consequences of Russian strikes
2 mins
January 18, 2026
The Sunday Guardian
BTS CONFIRMS APRIL WORLD TOUR, NEW ALBUM
Global K-pop phenomenon BTS announced on Tuesday that it will make a long-awaited return to the stage with a major world tour beginning in April, following the release of its first new album in more than three years.
1 mins
January 18, 2026
The Sunday Guardian
Between expansion, pushback, bipolar, multipolar worlds, Taiwan Strait is today’s dystopia
In today’s Taiwan Strait, there’s a whole world beset with riddles and rifts.
2 mins
January 18, 2026
The Sunday Guardian
The correct way is to love the Lord
Encountering God is not first about height or spectacle.
1 mins
January 18, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

