![]() Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications Monday, Feb 14, 2005 |
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Opinion
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Letters Towards a tripolar economy
The article "World economy: From uni-polar to tri-polar", (Business Line, February 8) made interesting reading. May I offer the following comments:In discussing a country's "impact on world growth," it may be more relevant to assess the scale of its trade, rather than the total size of its economy. We are living in a bipolar world economy, with the United States and the European Union by far the two largest trading blocs. The European Union is in fact the world's biggest trader, accounting for 20 per cent of global imports and exports. (The EU's total economy is almost as big as that of the US). As the EU is an economic union, with a common commercial policy and a single currency, it is no longer correct to rate the impact of its individual member-states on the world economy. The US, China and India should be compared to the EU as a whole. We do not compare France, for example, to an individual US or Indian state. Reginald Dale Editor-in-Chief European Affairs The European Institute Washington D.C.
Letters to the editor and contributions can be sent by e-mail to: bleditor@thehindu.co.in
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