The Group of Eleven ( N-11 also Next Eleven ) is the generic name of 11 modern states: Mexico , Nigeria , Egypt , Turkey , Iran , Pakistan , Bangladesh , Indonesia , Vietnam , South Korea , Philippines , highlighted by Jim O'Neill , Goldman analyst Sachs as countries with a high probability of turning their national economies into the largest locomotives of the 21st Century International Economic Relations System, along with the BRICS countries . The term was put into circulation in the annual report of the agency on December 15, 2005 [1] .
The countries of the group mainly intersect with the new industrial countries (NIS) that have committed and are now industrializing .
It should be noted that 7 out of 11 countries ( Nigeria , Egypt , Turkey , Iran , Pakistan , Bangladesh , Indonesia ) are simultaneously the leading countries of the Islamic world .
Content
Composition and parameters of national economies of the Group of Eleven and NIS countries
Developed countries - new industrial countries
- South Korea is a high-income country of the national economy [2] , a developed market country [3] , a highly educated country, a developed democracy country, an OECD member country, a G20 member country, an APEC member country
- Mexico is a country with an income above the national economy [2] , a developing country of the 1st level [3] , a country with a high level of education, a country of developing democracy, an OECD member country, a G20 member country, an APEC member country, NAFTA member country
- Similar NIS of the "first wave" [4] [5] were Singapore , Taiwan , Hong Kong (also 4 " Asian tigers " or "Asian dragons") and Latin American Argentina , Brazil .
Newest Industrialized Countries
- The Philippines is a country with a national economy below average income [2] , a developing country of the 2nd level [3] , a country with a secondary education, a country of developing democracy, an APEC member country, an ASEAN member country
- Turkey is a country with an income of the national economy above the average [2] , a country of the developing market of the 2nd level [3] , a country with a secondary education, a country with a bipolar political system, an OECD member country, a G20 member country, a partner country EU , ECO member country, NATO member country
- Indonesia is a country with an income of the national economy above the average [2] , a country with an average level of education, a country of developing democracy, a G20 member country, an APEC member country, an ASEAN member country
- Similar NIS “second”, “third” and “fourth” waves of NIS [5] are called Malaysia , Thailand , Chile .
Developing countries - promising industrial countries
- Egypt is a country with an income of the national economy below the average [2] , a country of the developing market of the 2nd level [3] , a country with a secondary education, a country with an authoritarian political regime, a country that has signed the Agadir agreement , a country member of COMESA / Agreement on free economic zone in east and south africa
- Iran is a country with a national economy below average income [2] , a country with a poorly developed market, a country with a secondary education, a country with an authoritarian political regime, an OPEC member country, an ECO member country
- Nigeria is a low-income country of the national economy [2] , a country with a poorly developed market [3] , a country with a low level of education, a country with an authoritarian political regime, a member of OPEC
- Pakistan is a low-income country of the national economy [2] , a developing country of the 2nd level market [3] , a country with a secondary education, a country with a bipolar political system, an ECO member country, a SAARC member country
- Vietnam is a low-income country of the national economy [2] , a country with a poorly developed market [3] , a country with a secondary level of education, a country with an authoritarian political regime, an ASEAN member country
Backward Countries - Possible Industrial Countries
- Bangladesh is a country with a low income national economy [2] , a country with a poorly developed market [3] , a country with a secondary level of education, a country with a bipolar political system
See also
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Notes
- ↑ Global Economics Paper 134 and Jim O'Neill, BRIMCs
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 According to the World Bank
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 According to the FTSE Group
- ↑ New industrial countries (NIS) :: Institute of Geography, RAS
- ↑ 1 2 MODEL OF DEVELOPMENT OF NEW INDUSTRIAL COUNTRIES E. A. Bragin. BULLETIN OF THE RUSSIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, 1998, Volume 68, No. 1, p. 85-89