Book Description
The extremely fierce international competition requires the reconstruction of "Statustics". This book first conducts a routine analysis of five aspects of economic statistics: the time series analysis of economic growth in the past 30 years of the G20, the distribution of "net factor income from abroad" between countries, the identification of true country responsibility for carbon emissions, the exploration of "real chain-positions" under the international competition pattern, and the evaluation and revision of Morris's "Measure of Civilization". Furthermore, the book analyzes the international judgment background from a global perspective: "civilized hierarchy" is the inherent "legal" basis for the blatant pursuit of hegemonic behavior by major powers. Since World War II, the world has been in a "post-territorial colonial era" rather than a "post-colonial era". The so-called "formal justice" of the empire is only a by-product of the struggle for hegemony among the great powers. The logic of "America First" is global dictatorship, which is exactly the biggest external obstacle to the independent development of all "other countries". The growth of emerging economies has a duality. We should conduct in-depth economic statistics, promote national credit construction, and lay a more solid cognitive foundation for all sectors of society to study and judge statustic.