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How to frame an economic blueprint for the 21st century

By Branko Milanovic | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2025-12-10 07:54
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The skyline of the Lujiazui Financial District with high-rise buildings and skyscrapers in Pudong, Shanghai, on July 12, 2018. [Photo/IC]

During the past several decades the world has undergone a dramatic transformation in the distribution of economic activity, and, less dramatically, in the distribution of political power between countries. The rise of Asia, and China in particular, has shifted the center of economic growth toward East and South Asia. By 2015, the total GDP of China — according to the World Bank's World Development Indicators (version October 2025), and measured in dollars of equal purchasing power — had overtaken the total GDP of the United States.

Today, China produces about 20 percent of global output of goods and services and the United States 15 percent. Similar shifts — again calculated using the same database — have been present in the case of other Asian economies. By the mid-1980s, the United Kingdom and India both produced about 3 percent of global output. Today, India's share is 8 percent, that of the UK 2 percent. The shares of Indonesia and the Netherlands have moved from being equal around 1980 (1.2 percent of global output) to Indonesia's being today more than three times as large.

If one takes the three most populous Asian countries (India, China and Indonesia), they account for about 3.1 billion people or almost 40 percent of the world population. Their combined share in world output is about 30 percent. Yet the three countries have less than 10 percent of voting rights at the IMF where the last apportioning of voting rights quota adjustments was approved in 2010 and implemented in 2016. If we include other large Asian countries such as Pakistan, Bangladesh and Vietnam, the disproportion between Asia's economic importance and its representation at the level of multilateral economic organizations is yawning. This is not a new point: it has been debated for years with some, very modest, success in addressing it.

At some level, the IMF and World Bank voting shares do not matter very much. What matters is to have a blocking power which requires 15 percent of shares and that only the US currently has. Realignment of the IMF shares with the actual economic power would possibly take away the veto power from the US, and perhaps, more importantly, make it easier for a coalition of countries from the Global South to jointly exercise such veto.

But a more important issue is the decision to either fundamentally reform the existing, or to create new, international economic organizations that might better reflect current economic power and economic policies. The latter is not merely a matter of voting rights; it is a question of soft power in economic thinking.

China and BRICS have taken some early steps toward creating new institutions, notably by founding the New Development Bank and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. Yet both are in early stages and have limited global resonance. China and the Global South lack experience in the creation of such institutions. As Mark Mazower's book Governing the World shows, all international institutions, from the Universal Postal Union established in the second half of the 19th century to the International Labour Organization founded after World War I and the World Bank and the IMF in 1944, have been created by Western powers. At the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944, despite nominal participation by many countries (Egypt, Iraq and India were under effective or formal British control, and China was represented by a government that controlled only a part of the country), the decision-making power rested squarely with the US and the UK. The issue facing BRICS countries today is how to "learn" the art of crafting international organizations such that they acknowledge the new economic and political realities while giving sufficient voice both to the Western powers, whose role is not the same as it was 80 years ago, and to many smaller nations. Particularly important is better inclusion of and greater voice for African countries which, in terms of their populations, are the only expanding part of the world.

There is also another task which is most relevant for China. Readjustment of the global economic power. The question is how to transmit the knowledge about what works in economic development to other countries that are poorer and by per capita income much behind China.

China's path to an upper-middle income country has been in many ways specific and reflective of particular domestic circumstances: from the ability to decentralize decision-making and thus check what works in practice, to an important role of the State in some sectors, to the ability to implement key economic decisions by a strong executive, or to conduct comprehensive anti-corruption campaigns. These are not features that can be easily replicated elsewhere. It is important to try to distill what are the features of China's economic policies that could be applied elsewhere and where they would hopefully produce similar results in terms of economic growth.

This is not an easy task. Not only does it require figuring out what were the key drivers of China's growth, but selecting those that are more general in nature. Despite many simplifying or exaggerated claims on behalf of the Washington Consensus — a set of economic policy prescriptions emphasizing so-called neo-liberalism, privatization and fiscal austerity — the precepts provided by it were clear and so general (and abstract) that they could be applied as much in a poor country like Mali as in a rich country like the Republic of Korea. An unreasonable emphasis on some principles (privatization of most activities including those with significant externalities and monopoly power, or elimination of capital controls) was a drawback of the Washington Consensus, but its general nature was its advantage.

It is incumbent on China and economists who study the Chinese experience to come up with a similar list of economic desiderata that would much better reflect what policies work in the 21st century than the Washington Consensus that was originally defined in the 1980s in response to the Latin American payment crisis.

The author is research professor at the Graduate Center, City University of New York and author of The Great Global Transformation published by Allen Lane in November 2025.

The views don't necessarily reflect those of China Daily.

If you have a specific expertise, or would like to share your thought about our stories, then send us your writings at opinion@chinadaily.com.cn, and comment@chinadaily.com.cn.

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