Saturday, December 13, 2008

Gross National Income by language

Another chapter in our "choosing a language" series. The numbers are sound but approximate for languages that span many countries (including multilingual ones) and regions. Japan was a cinch to look up. How do you account for Hindi or Arabic?

A good companion piece for this might be a list of countries that are the largest trading partners of a particular country or region. I'll leave that for everyone's own homework.

GNI (Gross national income) by language/area/country

Estimates based on World Bank figures for 2007 and other sources (for regions)
in millions of US dollars

English (US, UK, Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, SAR) $19,000,000

Japanese $4,813,341

German $4,000,000

Chinese (China, Taiwan, HK) $3,740,000

Spanish $3,300,000

French (France, Quebec, Belgium, Suisse Romande) $3,350,000

Italian $2,000,000

Portuguese (Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Mozambique etc.) $1,400,000

Russian (Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan) $1,308,000

India $1,069,427

South Korea $955,802

Arabic below $1 trillion

Economic weight of Spanish-speakers in the US estimated at $800 billion (not included).

6 comments:

  1. It's interesting that the combined total for 4 "neo-latin" languages is (3,300 + 3,350 + 2,000 + 1,400) = 10.050 billion US$ of GNI, putting it behind English and way ahead of all (other) individual languages on the list, which are all quite different from each other (assuming English and German are more distinct than, say, French and Spanish, which I think they are).

    It's even ahead of Japanese + Mandarin.

    So, in this "economic" sense, those lazy learners who just want to keep learning Romance languages don't come out looking bad at all.

    I wonder what the combined weight of all Germanic economies is (excluding English).

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  2. German takes longer than French - for an English speaker. There's nothing lazy, however, about learning 4 Romance languages. The “Germanic” area's GNI is US$ 6 trillion. German and Neo-Latin languages make sense. This group has a combined GNI of some $15 trillion. It approaches English – now and covers a similarly large geographic area.

    4 Romance Languages: approximately 35 million km2, 900,000,000 people, $10 trillion GNI

    Chinese: 10 million km2, 1.3 billion people, $3.7 trillion GNI

    Economically they might reach parity in about 20 years. Assuming continued lethargy on the other side, it’ll be good 30 years until Chinese offers any significant advantage.

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  3. When you say "continued lethargy", do you mean Latin America remaining a third world place?

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  4. I was referring to economic growth rates. Latin America's economy has grown at a 5 percent rate for the past five years. China's economy has been growing at a 10 percent rate for almost 30 years.

    Regardless of their growth rate both China and Latin America will have "third world" pockets in 30 years.

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  5. If you look at the top 10 languages at the How To Learn Any Language forum,

    Top 10 Target Languages
    % of non native speakers
    Language Members
    1. English - 65%
    2. Spanish - 27%
    3. French - 26%
    4. German - 20%
    5. Japanese - 11%
    6. Italian - 9%
    7. Russian - 9%
    8. Mandarin - 8%
    9. Portuguese - 4%
    10. Latin - 3%

    benevolently admitting Latin as a good old bit of culture to pursue in retirement, the order of the rest of the languages more or less fits my idea of relative entertainment and other value renormalized by difficulty. I'd probably do Portuguese right after Italian, but otherwise, it's not a bad order in which to tackle them.

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  6. Blogger profiles by interest

    Japan 8,800
    Spanish 4,500
    French 4,200
    Japanese 3,300
    Europe 2,900
    Italy 2,700
    France 2,500
    Paris 2,400
    China 2,400
    India 2,300
    German 1,800
    Latin 1,700
    Mexico 1,500
    Germany 1,400
    Spain 1,300
    Russia 1,300
    Chinese 1,100
    Italian 1,000
    Brazil 807
    Greek 696
    Arabic 679
    Russian 653
    Korean 568
    Rome 539
    Tokyo 527
    Madrid 319
    Portuguese 301
    Hindi 218

    ReplyDelete