Robeco hires three EM debt portfolio managers from Candriam for dual fund launch

Diliana Deltcheva, Richard Briggs, and Nicholas Sauer will join the Dutch asset manager in the third quarter of 2024 as lead managers of the two funds. The launches are expected to complement Robeco’s current fixed income offerings in emerging markets, which cover Asian bonds and EM credits, and are part of the firm’s 2021-25 plans to strengthen its sovereign EM debt capability and address market demands. Robeco to launch equity and credit ‘transition investing’ funds Deltcheva joins after nearly a decade at Candriam, where she most recently was head of EM debt. Prior to her time a…

Ranked: The Top 6 Economies by Share of Global GDP (1980-2024)

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May 14, 2024 Graphics/Design:

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

Top 6 Economies by Share of Global GDP (1980-2024)

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Over time, the distribution of global GDP among the world’s largest economies has shifted dynamically, reflecting changes in economic policies, technological advancements, and demographic trends.

To see how this has played out in recent decades, we visualized the world’s top six economies by their share of global GDP from 1980 to 2024.

All figures were sourced from the IMF’s World Economic Outlook (April 2024 edition) and are based on using current prices.

Data and Highlights

The data we used to create this graphic can be found in the table below.

Share of Global
GDP (%)U.S.EUChinaJapanUKIndia 198025.4%28.6%2.7%10.1%5.4%1.7% 198127.8%24.7%2.5%10.8%5.1%1.7% 198229.6%24.4%2.5%10.2%4.9%1.8% 198331.3%23.2%2.6%10.9%4.6%1.9% 198433.6%21.6%2.6%11.2%4.2%1.8% 198534.6%21.3%2.5%11.4%4.3%1.9% 198631.0%24.7%2.0%14.3%4.4%1.7% 198728.5%26.3%1.9%15.2%4.8%1.6% 198827.3%25.9%2.1%16.3%5.2%1.5% 198928.0%25.0%2.3%15.4%5.0%1.5% 199026.3%27.4%1.8%14.1%5.3%1.4% 199126.0%28.0%1.7%15.4%5.3%1.1% 199225.7%28.8%1.9%15.7%5.1%1.1% 199326.3%25.6%2.4%17.4%4.4%1.1% 199426.0%25.3%2.0%17.8%4.4%1.2% 199524.5%26.5%2.3%17.8%4.3%1.2% 199625.1%26.2%2.7%15.3%4.4%1.2% 199726.8%24.1%3.0%14.0%4.9%1.3% 199828.4%25.0%3.2%12.9%5.2%1.3% 199929.2%24.0%3.3%14.0%5.1%1.4% 200030.1%21.3%3.5%14.6%4.9%1.4% 200131.3%21.8%3.9%12.9%4.9%1.4% 200231.3%23.1%4.2%12.0%5.1%1.5% 200329.2%25.3%4.2%11.5%5.2%1.5% 200427.7%25.8%4.4%11.1%5.5%1.6% 200527.2%24.9%4.8%10.1%5.3%1.7% 200626.7%24.5%5.3%8.9%5.2%1.8% 200724.7%25.2%6.1%7.8%5.3%2.1% 200823.0%25.4%7.1%8.0%4.6%1.9% 200923.8%24.3%8.4%8.7%4.0%2.2% 201022.6%21.9%9.1%8.7%3.7%2.5% 201121.1%21.3%10.1%8.4%3.6%2.5% 201221.6%19.5%11.3%8.3%3.6%2.4% 201321.8%19.7%12.4%6.7%3.6%2.4% 201422.1%19.7%13.2%6.2%3.9%2.6% 201524.4%18.0%14.8%5.9%3.9%2.8% 201624.6%18.2%14.7%6.5%3.5%3.0% 201724.1%18.2%15.1%6.1%3.3%3.3% 201824.0%18.5%16.0%5.8%3.3%3.1% 201924.6%17.9%16.4%5.8%3.3%3.2% 202025.0%18.0%17.4%5.9%3.2%3.1% 202124.3%17.9%18.3%5.2%3.2%3.3% 202225.6%16.7%17.7%4.2%3.1%3.3% 202326.1%17.5%16.9%4.0%3.2%3.4% 2024E26.3%17.3%16.9%3.8%3.2%3.6% U.S. Resilience

Starting with the U.S., we can see that America’s share of global GDP has fluctuated quite significantly over time.

After bottoming out at 21.1% in 2011, the U.S. economy grew its relative size by several percentage points, and is estimated by the IMF to make up 26.3% of global GDP in 2024.

This chart also suggests that the U.S. has managed a stronger recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, evidenced by its rising share of global GDP since 2020. China, the EU, and Japan have seen relative declines over the same period.

China’s Incredible Rise

This

Amazon Pressed on Workers’ Rights – Again

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Wholesale prices rose 0.5% in April, more than expected

The producer price index, a measure of what producers receive for the goods they produce, increased 0.5% in April and was up 2.2% on a 12-month basis, the biggest gain in a year. The core PPI also rose 0.5% compared with the 0.2% Dow Jones estimate. Services prices boosted the wholesale inflation reading, climbing 0.6% and accounting for about three-quarters of the headline gain.

Wholesale prices jumped more than expected in April, putting up another potential roadblock to interest rate cuts anytime soon.

The producer price index, a gauge of prices received at the wholesale level, increased 0.5% for the month, higher than the 0.3% Dow Jones estimate, the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Tuesday. However, the March reading was revised from an initially reported 0.2% gain to a decline of 0.1%.

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Stock market futures were around breakeven following the data while Treasury yields were mixed.

“Sticky inflation looked downright stuck this morning after a much hotter-than-expected inflation reading. But with last month’s numbers revised lower, this report may not have been as much of an upside shock as it first appeared to be,” said Chris Larkin, managing director of trading and investing for E-Trade from Morgan Stanley.

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AMC completes $250 million stock sale during meme rally, shares jump 110%

Victor J. Blue | Getty Images News | Getty Images

AMC Entertainment raised about $250 million of new equity capital, completing the sale Monday during the revived meme stock craze triggered by the return of “Roaring Kitty.”

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