Jul 6th 2011, 17:01 by R.A. | WASHINGTON
The Economist
OVER at Democracy in America , a colleague embarks on an interesting discussion highlighting the similarities between the institutional roots of economic troubles in Europe and America . Then, alas, he goes astray:
I actually think the issue goes beyond the increasing unwillingness of Chinese authorities to even pretend to listen to Western complaints about human rights. Unless you buy the Nouriel Roubini argument, and I don't, China is going to be the world's largest economy within ten or 15 years, bigger than America or the euro-zone. And, in case anyone has failed to notice, it's a Communist country.
Every year Here's the deal. For all its competent stewardship, China 's government runs a country where the average citizen is only about 15% as rich as the average American. And if we look at the world's richest large countries (say those with 10m people or more) in terms of per capita GDP, we see that the league tables are dominated by democracies. In order: America, the Netherlands, Australia, Canada, Belgium, Germany, Taiwan, Britain, France, Japan, South Korea, Spain, Italy, Greece, Cyprus, Czech Republic. The first non-democratic large country to make the list? Saudi Arabia . And I don't think we need to chalk its wealth up to sound macroeconomic management.
It is possible to grow rapidly as an authoritarian country. It's even possible to become wealthy as an authoritarian country, though it helps to be small and resource-rich. Becoming democratic is no guarantee of economic riches, either. But it appears to take a democratic system of governance to build and sustain high levels of national wealth. Maybe China will challenge this record some day. It has a lot more growing to do first.
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