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From Head of Emerging Markets at Morgan Stanley - a provocative account of why the next economic stars won’t be those we think
The argument of BREAKOUT NATIONS is that the astonishingly rapid growth over the last decade of the world’s celebrated emerging markets is coming to an end. China, in particular, will soon slow, but its place will not necessarily be taken by Brazil, Russia or India, all of which Ruchir Sharma shows have weaknesses and difficulties often overlooked in the inflated expectations and emerging markets mania of the past decade. The new ‘breakout nations’ will probably spring from the margins - even from the shadows. Sharma identifies which they are most likely to be, and why.
Sharma, head of one of the world’s leading emerging market funds, has spent two decades travelling the globe to find out what is happening on the ground in developing countries. With this first-hand knowledge, he takes his readers on a tour of two dozen of the world’s most interesting economies, introducing the critical players and describing and analysing the forces - many unique to each nation - which will make the successes and flops of the future.
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From Head of Emerging Markets at Morgan Stanley - a provocative account of why the next economic stars won’t be those we think
The argument of BREAKOUT NATIONS is that the astonishingly rapid growth over the last decade of the world’s celebrated emerging markets is coming to an end. China, in particular, will soon slow, but its place will not necessarily be taken by Brazil, Russia or India, all of which Ruchir Sharma shows have weaknesses and difficulties often overlooked in the inflated expectations and emerging markets mania of the past decade. The new ‘breakout nations’ will probably spring from the margins - even from the shadows. Sharma identifies which they are most likely to be, and why.
Sharma, head of one of the world’s leading emerging market funds, has spent two decades travelling the globe to find out what is happening on the ground in developing countries. With this first-hand knowledge, he takes his readers on a tour of two dozen of the world’s most interesting economies, introducing the critical players and describing and analysing the forces - many unique to each nation - which will make the successes and flops of the future.