Stella Dimoko Korkus.com: Licence To MINT Money?..... The Countries That Could Become Economic Super Powers!

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Friday, January 03, 2014

Licence To MINT Money?..... The Countries That Could Become Economic Super Powers!





Thirteen years ago, Jim O’Neill, former chief economist and head of asset management at Goldman Sachs, coined the term BRIC for four countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China) poised to join the G6 in the economic big time. South Africa, added later, made it BRICS. Then, 11 emerging countries, including Iran, South Korea and Pakistan, were singled out as the N11 (Next-11).
Now O’Neill is back, marking out four countries (Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey) from the N11 as ones to watch for huge economic growth.




‘If they get their act together, they’ve got the ability to get so much bigger,’ said O’Neill of the MINT countries, the subject of his upcoming BBC radio series, MINT: The Next Economic Giants (Radio 4, January 6 to 9 at 9am). ‘If not as big as the BRICs, then not that far off.’
Mexico, O’Neill argues, previously lost out to China on cheap exports and labour. But with wages increasing in China, Mexico can capitalise, especially with its proximity to the US.



‘It’s probably the most competitive OECD country at the moment,’ said O’Neill. ‘And these guys have a bunch of young reformers who make Maggie Thatcher look like a pussycat.’
Indonesia has a chance to boom, like Mexico, because of a large, willing workforce and a rapidly urbanising population, said O’Neill. ‘There are 240m of them in Indonesia, the third largest populated country in the world.’


Turkey, meanwhile, benefits from its geographical position between East and West and ‘because they know how to deal with us in the West, with the Middle East, with the Russians’.
But the most exciting MINT country, O’Neill suggests, is Nigeria. ‘The place is complete madness, of course, and one can’t be 100 per cent sure, given its challenges, that it will be one country in four years. But after India, it’s the best in the world in terms of useful population. By 2050, Nigeria will have more people than the United States. If you get those young people in productive jobs, that place will arguably be the most exciting country in the world in the next 30 years. Linked to that, there are so many creative entrepreneurs there and, interestingly, so many educated Nigerians returning from the US because they smell this opportunity to be the next big thing.’ Nigeria is also rich in resources, including oil.
But is the MINT prediction solid or just a random selection of countries which make up a clever acronym?



‘You could say the MINT countries are a bit predictable because the group weeds out the countries which are basket cases at the moment,’ said Felix Martin, author of Money: The Unauthorised Biography. ‘The problem is many of the countries that made the most convincing advances in economic development over the last century were anything but predictable. Real progress often started from crisis and in the most unexpected places. A good example is Korea. It was poorer than Ghana in 1960 and, no doubt, in 1960, Goldman Sachs would’ve said Ghana, rather than Korea, was the next big thing. But the devastation caused by the Korean War meant Korea modernised exceptionally quickly, whilst peaceful, promising Ghana went nowhere.


‘I’d diversify my bets across several countries currently in the midst of profound social change. For example, Egypt, Iran, Thailand and, with any luck, Ukraine. Not all these will prosper but the ones that do are likely to be on a genuinely fresh path


Regardless of whoever is next to get minted, a major question in any country’s economic growth is this: ‘Who benefits?’. Pope Francis recently condemned faith in the ‘trickle down’ theory, which too often leaves wealth in the hands of the few, rather than benefitting a country’s entire population, including the poor. Despite massive growth, Brazil still has one of the most unequal societies in the world, with millions living in poverty while record numbers of millionaires are produced. The other BRIC countries – Russia, India and China – have all seen a widening gap between rich and poor.


Good, determined and corruption-free governments are key to steering economic development to benefit the many, said O’Neill. But he dismisses the notion that banks and investors could also help by behaving more ethically. Many argue, for example, that Mexico’s drug-fuelled instability is exacerbated by major banks, such as HSBC, laundering drug cartels’ money. In Nigeria, bankers, investors and companies, such as Shell, are accused of being part of a corrupt system that profits from the country’s resources but fuels poverty. However, O’Neill says a bank is merely ‘an intermediary who’s just transmitting money from one place to another’.


Nick Dearden, director of the World Development Movement, disagrees. ‘Banks are massively powerful players whose operations can exacerbate poverty and inequality and erode democracy,’ he said. ‘Look at the Third World debt crisis in the 1980s and 90s, in which dozens of countries became much poorer and millions suffered and died in South America and Africa. Banks created that crisis through unjust lending. Or the Southeast Asian crisis in 1997, in which Thailand and Indonesia were sent into depression by financial speculation. It’s the same with the Euro crisis today.’


Some of the MINT countries are ‘exciting’ because of their competitiveness, which is based, in part, on large numbers of people prepared to work for low wages.
‘O’Neill’s choice of countries is really interesting because in both Nigeria and Indonesia, poverty is rising at the same time as wealth is rising,’ said Dearden. ‘We’re seeing a form of “development”, driven by finance and high commodity prices, which hugely benefits the rich but makes the lives of the poor even harder. It’s locking countries into a form of growth which is all about making the rich even more rich and the poor even more poor.’culled





34 comments:

  1. I'll come back and read the comments for summary......

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  2. *Yawns* *still Yawnig* yawwwwwwnnnnss. Amen.

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  3. Oya prince jobless can we c ur comments lepa shandy oya we are waiting.I am quite sure comments will not be up to 50.as for me I got nothing to say.

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    1. Gossip is the most interesting thing they do!

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  4. Oga, please visit Nigeria and that your thesis will change.

    On paper, Nigeria looks good. We've got the population, resources, brains to belong to the group you put us. But you didn't factor in the thieves running the Country. They are the main reasons why your prediction is off target.

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  5. Dis is d kind of news I like to hear about my beloveth country ;stuffz like dis will give u hope about ur country..haba not all those bad bad predictions' m begining 2 wonder if God neva reveals anything gud 4 Nigeria.. @ d begining of a new year every pastor com up wit their predictions n mayb out of 15 prophecy only 2 or 3 will be positive.m happy dat som one is saying a gud thing about Nigeria after such a long time.

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  6. I kn sumday we truelly will b d qiants we r.

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  7. Quite informative. We cant do otherwise than to hope

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  8. Thanks for the enlightenment. Very interesting. Keep it up.

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  9. I would put my change on this, I BELIEVE

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  10. very pleasing to hear this. Something to be optimistic about Nigeria. Hope dey

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  11. And my head can't contain this long gist.
    Over to the ITKs on this blog.
    In one sentence pls?

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  12. Is good to be great and wealthy with good source of income.

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  13. Nigeria can never be gud again... unless we av obama as d president.. so don't deceive us with ur stupid information.okbye#sipsMoetnChandon#

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  14. Corruption has stopped the next big push for them bar maybe Turkey. They have been emerging countries for the past 20 years and still, not much has happened. Tourism helps Mexico, Turkey and Indonesia but Nigeria will never be a hot spot for tourism.

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  15. Mrs Lagbaja from NYC3 January 2014 at 10:40

    Time to plan on what to do in Nigeria has come o cos I must cash in. My thinking cap, where art thou!

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  16. Mrs Lagbaja from NYC3 January 2014 at 10:42

    Time to plan on businesses to invest in Nigeria cos I must cash in. My thinking cap, where art thou!

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  17. Nigeria, Nigeria,all this would work if only 1)we rewrite our constitution:thereby telling the public how public funds, budget allocations are spent, these could reduce the corruption in government, 2)Stable electricity:these will encourage both foreign&local investments,and encourage cheap factors of production, thereby giving more entrepreneurs a lot more trust in investments &their goods&services. 3)Security: if Nigeria is safe then people will come in,if its not then i wonder.4)more employment opportunities thereby reducing the issues of kidnapping, stealing and corruption at large as a country, if these can be fixed at even 90% quotient then we have a new Nigeria.

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  18. Nigeria can never be better period.let's emulate the ghanians then we might be a step closer.

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    1. Back to sender!nigeria go better

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  19. Can Nigeria ever get better? This is the question on lots lip, well let's watch. As for me I strongly believe in a better Nigeria even though I have my doubts and reservation.

    @DivyCherry

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  20. Naija ll surely be great one day, we shall overcome tyranny in our country! soon very soon, the masses ll have cause to smile.

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  21. I know one day niaja go better for u and i


    Mrs J

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  22. Good one. This article gives one a rethink about the present situation of Nigeria. We have everything at our disposal; the minerals, the work force, the intelligence etc but The problem is the people we have put in charge of all these resources who are supposed to create the platform for development and provide the basic amenities like security, steady electricity, good water, good roads, standard schools and hospitals. Nigeria doesn't really need the federal government to build factories and set up companies that will boost our economy and make us one of the top 5 countries in the world. All we need is an enabling environment with the basic amenities and I can bet that there are indigenous companies that would spring up and compete with others on the international level.

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  23. I believe in a better Nigeria. D downfall of Pdp is d 1st step whc God has settled thru d confusion in der camp. D nxt step is uprooting all d old men hu wnt 2 tak Naija 2 der graves. Dis generation wld bring about a better Nigeria, bt it is disheartening 2 si dt doz hu ought 2 b agitatin 2wards it r dz hu dnt bliv. Watch out 4 Naija. All diz old minority r gonna b overthrown.

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  24. Double digit growth projected for Nigeria after 2015.
    South African economy is the best right now. We are hoping things get better

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  25. That caption on nigerian in bold letters just explains it all,that the country will only utilise it's number or population power only if the pple are given employment or kept busy!
    Check out how China used it's population wisely and it's now mentioned amongst world powers!nigeria has all it takes;mineral resources,human resources,raw talents ettc....but then we will keep hoping.

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