fortaleza wrote: ↑10/04/2021 16:10
Hemsworth30 wrote: ↑10/04/2021 03:03
I Slovenija bilježi negativan prirodni priraštaj, samo što je iseljavanje znatno manje.
I Mongolija je veća od Pakistana pa ima manje stanovnika. Drastično manje.
Da, ali je razlika između Mongolije i Pakistana drastična u smislu geografije, zemlje, uvjeta, ova prva je kontinentalna zavucena zemlja sa ledenim zimama gdje im se jezera polede i odu u ogromne minuse zimi, a ogroman komad zemlje im je pustinja Gobi gdje nemaju nikakvih uvjeta za život.
S druge strane BiH ima u postotku najveće šumske resurse u Europi, blagu klimu na jugu, ogromne vodne potencijale, blizinu mora, te ponešto i plodne zemlje. Razlika između Slovenije i BiH u tim uvjetima je nikakva.
A razliku u lokaciji i historijskim okolnostima koje su morale uticati na razvoj između Slovenije i Bosne ćemo zanemariti
Slovenia is slightly ahead of Spain and Italy already in HDI, it is poorer than both though.
Economy is shaped by many non-controlled factors. Slovenia is a small, largely rural, sparcely populated country located in a key economic area in Europe on the sides of the Alps.
Slovenia's natural place is along Austria and Switzerland, the fact that it is poorer than Italy or Spain is precisely the result of the same effect that extends all over eastern Europe. Being that rich for Slovenia is on pair with the rest of eastern Europe comparatively, because Slovenia should be one of the wealthiest places on earth given its parametres and location. Is Slovenia singled out as one of—if not the—richest Slavic countries? Sure, but Slovenia's place is being one of the richest countries, Slavic and non-Slavic.
As a matter of fact, Italian regions bordering Slovenia such as Trento-South Tyrol or Friuli-Venezia Giulia have a nominal GDP per capita of 42,000 and 31,000 respectively, while Slovenia has a nominal GDP per capita of 27,000. Thus it is poorer than the equivalent Italian regions in terms of location, geography and broad characteristics.
Will it surpass Italy and Spain? Very likely, as I said Slovenia's natural place is being wealthier than Italy and Spain overall. Many regions in Spain and Italy will remain wealthier than Slovenia though, for the same reason but magnified by the effect of being larger countries (meaning rich regions in Spain and Italy have a bunch of poorer ones that make them richer colaterally). So richer regions in Italy and Spain will remain richer than Slovenia, or at least they should, but Slovenia should and I'm sure will surpass both countries as a whole in terms of GDP per capita.