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More than one billion Asians will join global middle class by 2030: Study

Bangladesh set to rise up the rankings fastest; India and China to add about three-quarters of a billion members between them.

Nagpur, cities, city, people, traffic, population, people,
India and China will add about three-quarters of a billion members between them to the world's middle class. This photo shows a street scene in Nagpur city of India’s Maharashtra state.
Alex Tanzi | Bloomberg
2 min read Last Updated : Sep 04 2021 | 1:05 AM IST
More than 1 billion Asians are set to join the global middle class by 2030, according to a new study that predicts the pandemic will prove just a temporary pause in the world economy’s great demographic shift. 

The middle class--households where per-capita spending is between $11 and $110 a day--amounts to some 3.75 billion people this year, according to the World Data Lab. That cohort is projected to keep growing through 2030 with India and China, the most populous countries, adding about three-quarters of a billion members between them.

The other biggest contributors are also in Asia. They include countries like Indonesia--projected to have the world’s fourth-biggest middle class by 2030, overtaking Russia and Japan--and Bangladesh, a densely populated country the size of Iowa, which is set to rise up the rankings faster than any other nation. It’s forecast to jump from 28th to 11th place, adding more than 50 million middle-class consumers. 

Asian countries already make up more than half of the world’s middle class, but they account for only 41% of that group’s consumer spending, according to the study. The share is set to exceed 50% by 2032.

China, India and the U.S. are projected to retain the top three rankings as the countries with the largest middle-class populations, according to World Data Lab. Slow or negative population growth in some advanced economies will lead to a shrinking middle class in countries like Japan, Germany, Italy and Poland.


(Note: The WDL study uses 2011 dollars at purchasing power parity.)





















 
Rich Asians jump booster queue amid shortage

In some of Asia’s Covid-19 hotspots, wealthier citizens are nabbing booster shots even as most people remain unvaccinated, undermining the inoculation strategies of nations struggling with the highly infectious Delta variant. The growing trend in countries like Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines is worsening inequities at a time when they are grappling with vaccine shortages.  In Indonesia — where the health ministry has said boosters are only for health workers — members of the political elite were caught discussing boosters they received. (Bloomberg)

Topics :populationmiddle classworld economy