Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
896584 Technological Forecasting and Social Change 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The growth of GDP is considered as a natural-growth process amenable to description by the logistic-growth equation. The S-shaped logistic pattern provides good descriptions and forecasts for both nominal and real GDP per capita in the US over the last 80 years. This enables the calculation of a long-term forecast for inflation, which is to enter a declining trend not so far in the future. The two logistics are well advanced, more so for nominal GDP. The assumption for logistic growth works even better for Japan whose nominal GDP per capita has already completed tracing out an entire logistic trajectory. The economic woes of industrialized countries could be attributed to the saturation of growth there, as if a niche in nature had been filled to capacity. In contrast, GDP growth in China and India is in the very early stages of logistic growth still indistinguishable from exponential patterns. The ceiling of these logistics can be anywhere between 5 and 10 times today's levels.

► GDP evolution can be considered to be a natural-growth process obeying the logistic law. ► The growth of the US nominal GDP is 77.6% saturated by the end of 2012. ► The growth of the Japan GDP is 100% saturated since the early 1990s. ► Inflation in the US is to soon enter a declining trend. ► China and India are at the very early phases of logistic growth; still exponential in nature.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Business and International Management
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