Next Eleven
Next Eleven | |
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N-11 countries in Magenta | |
Type | High potential economies |
Members |
11 Countries
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The Next Eleven (known also by the numeronym N-11) are the eleven countries – Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines, Turkey, South Korea and Vietnam – identified by Goldman Sachs investment banker and economist Jim O'Neill in a research paper as having a high potential of becoming, along with the BRICS countries, among the world's largest economies in the 21st century.[1] The bank chose these states, all with promising outlooks for investment and future growth, on December 12, 2005. At the end of 2011, the four most prominent countries in the Next Eleven, Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey (commonly referret to as MINT), made up 73 percent of all Next Eleven GDP. BRIC GDP was $13.5 trillion, MINT GDP comprising almost 30 percent of that: $3.9 trillion.[2]
The criteria that Goldman Sachs used were macroeconomic stability, political maturity, openness of trade and investment policies, and the quality of education. The N-11 paper is a follow-up to the bank's 2003 paper on the four emerging "BRIC" economies, Brazil, Russia, India, and China.[3] It can be compared with the CIVETS list coined by Robert Ward, global forecasting director for the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) – having a few differences, but many similarities.
Next Eleven countries
Developed countries
- South Korea : Advanced economy (both CIA and IMF), High-income economy,[4] Very High human development, High-income OECD member, Developed market (in: Dow Jones index, FTSE index, and S&P index),[5] Democracy, Development Assistance Committee member, Paris Club member, G-20 major economies, Four Asian Tigers, KORUS FTA, European Union-Korea FTA, Visa Waiver Program participant, APEC founding member, ASEAN Plus Three founding member, EAS founding member
Newly industrialised countries
- Indonesia : Lower-middle-income economy,[4] Medium human development, Secondary Emerging market,[6] Flawed democracy, 3G country, Tiger Cub Economy, G-20 major economies, MINT country, APEC founding member, ASEAN founding member, East Asia Summit founding member, Developing 8 Countries
- Iran : Upper-middle-income economy,[7] High human development, authoritarian regime, OPEC and GECF founding member, ECO founding member, Group of 15 member, Developing 8 Countries
- Mexico : Upper-middle-income economy,[4] High human development, democracy, OECD member, Advanced Emerging market,[6] G-20 major economies, G8+5 member, MINT country, NAFTA, APEC member, Pacific Alliance founding member, Pacific Puma country
- Philippines : Lower-middle-income economy,[4] Medium human development, Secondary Emerging market,[6] Flawed democracy, G-20 Developing Economy, 3G country, Tiger Cub Economy, ASEAN founding member, APEC Founding member, EAS founding member
- Turkey : Upper-middle-income economy[8] and an advanced emerging market[6] with a high human development and a flawed democracy. Founding member of the OECD, Developing-8 and BSEC. Member of the G-20, NATO, Council of Europe, EU Customs Union, ECO and MINT. Also has an EU Association Agreement.
Developing countries
- Bangladesh : Lower-middle-income economy,[9] listed under the developing countries,[9][10] has medium human development[11] Frontier market, Hybrid regime, 3G country, SAARC founding member, BIMSTEC member, Developing 8 Countries
- Egypt : Lower-middle-income economy,[4] Medium human development, Secondary Emerging market,[6] authoritarian regime, 3G country, G20 developing nations, Arab League member, GAFTA member, AU member, CAEU founding member, COMESA member, ENP member, Developing 8 Countries
- Nigeria : Lower-middle-income economy,[4] Low human development, Frontier market,[12] Flawed Democracy, 3G country, MINT country, AU member, OPEC member, Developing 8 Countries, Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) member
- Pakistan : Lower-middle-income economy,[13] Secondary Emerging market,[6] Hybrid Regime, G20 developing nations, SAARC founding member, Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO) founding member, Developing 8 Countries, 4G Country .
- Vietnam : Lower-middle-income economy,[4] Fast emerging, Medium human development, Frontier market,[12] authoritarian regime,[14] 3G country, APEC member, ASEAN member, EAS founding member.
Country data
Country | Population | GDP (PPP) (2014) | GDP (nominal) (2014) | GDP per capita (PPP) (2014) | GDP per capita (nominal) (2014) | Exports (2014) | Imports (2014) | Trade (2014) | HDI (2015) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bangladesh | 150,039,000 | $620.3 billion | $223.9 billion | $3,840 | $1,466 | $37.6 billion | $40.7 billion | $78.6 billion | 0.570 |
Egypt | 92,100,000 | $1,047 billion | $330.8 billion | $11,850 | $3,740 | $27.1 billion | $55.2 billion | $82.3 billion | 0.690 |
Indonesia | 237,641,000 | $2,685.9 billion | $888.6 billion | $9,635 | $3,534 | $179.4 billion | $168.4 billion | $347.8 billion | 0.684 |
Iran | 78,192,200 | $1,334.3 billion | $404.1 billion | $17,114 | $5,183 | $95.7 billion | $61.2 billion | $156.9 billion | 0.766 |
Mexico | 123,337,000 | $2,140.6 billion | $1,282.7 billion | $17,881 | $10,715 | $406.4 billion | $407.1 billion | $813.5 billion | 0.756 |
Nigeria | 174,507,539 | $1,049.1 billion | $573.6 billion | $5,746 | $3,082 | $93.01 billion | $52.7 billion | $145.71 billion | 0.514 |
Pakistan | 182,490,721 | $926.3 billion | $289.4 billion | $4,574 | $1,343 | $25.1 billion | $45.07 billion | $70.17 billion | 0.538 |
Philippines | 104,476,000 | $692.2 billion | $250.1 billion | $6,597 | $2,865 | $53.3 billion | $63.6 billion | $116.9 billion | 0.668 |
South Korea | 50,004,441 | $1,778.8 billion | $1,416.9 billion | $35,277 | $28,101 | $572.7 billion | $525.5 billion | $1,098.2 billion | 0.898 |
Turkey | 73,723,000 | $1,508.1 billion | $751 billion | $18,874 | $9,562 | $176.6 billion | $240.4 billion | $417 billion | 0.761 |
Vietnam | 93,388,000 | $510.7 billion | $186.04 billion | $5,295 | $2,053 | $147 billion | $138.6 billion | $285.6 billion | 0.666 |
See also
- Nylonkong-Current Three
- E7 (countries)
- Chindia
- Developing 8 Countries
- CIVETS
- Emerging markets
- Emerging and growth-leading economies
- G20 developing nations
- Group of 24
- List of countries by GDP (nominal), (per capita)
- List of countries by HDI rank
- Newly industrialized countries
- Tiger Cub Economies
- European Union Association Agreement
- List of country groupings
- List of multilateral free-trade agreements
References
- ↑ Goldman Sachs’s MIST Topping BRICs as Smaller Markets Outperform - Bloomberg
- ↑ "Indonesia negara jagoan masa depan". Retrieved August 9, 2012.
- ↑ Global Economics Paper 134 and Jim O'Neill, BRIMCs
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Data - Country Groups". World Bank. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
- ↑ Ihlwan, Moon (2009-09-21). "Korea Wins FTSE Developed World Status". BusinessWeek. Retrieved 2012-04-12.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 See FTSE emerging markets list
- ↑ Torbat, Akbar E. (2010-09-27). "Industrialization and Dependency: the Case of Iran". Los Angeles: California State University. Retrieved 2011-09-04.
- ↑ "Country and lending groups", World Bank, Retrieved July 2, 2013
- 1 2 "Country and Lending Groups". World Bank. Retrieved 2015-03-11.
- ↑ "International Statistical Institute (ISI), 2014". Developing Countries. The International Statistical Institute. Retrieved 2015-03-11.
- ↑ "Bangladesh Economy is a Star in the World Economy says UN Expert" (PDF). United Nations. 2011. Retrieved July 6, 2013.
- 1 2 See FTSE frontier markets list
- ↑ "Country and Lending Groups | Data". Data.worldbank.org. Retrieved 2012-04-12.
- ↑ "Vietnam country profile - Overview". BBC News. 2012-01-15. Retrieved 2012-04-12.
Further reading
- "The N-11: More Than an Acronym" – Goldman Sachs study of N-11 nations, Global Economics Paper No: 153, March 28, 2007.