China Counts...And Counts

Totaling up more than a billion people is just the beginning. There's steel production (up 25%), makeup sales (up 19%) and the number of "large domestic animals" that suffered from a shortage of drinking water last year (29.36 million). From rice harvests to sports medals, China's new census quantifies all the ways a poor country is getting rich. The U.S. leads the economic race, but China is sprinting to catch up. [This article consists of a complex diagram. Please see hardcopy of magazine.] CHINA pop. 1,314,480,000 U.S. pop. 301,325,000

GDP [CHINA] $2.7 trillion $2,054 per person

[U.S.] $13.2 trillion $43,950 per person Taxes collected [CHINA] $486 billion $370 per person

[U.S.] $2.5 trillion $8,297 per person

Balance of trade [CHINA] $177.5 billion surplus

[U.S.] $225 billion deficit

Cell phone users [CHINA] 461 million 35 per 100 people

[U.S.] 219 million 73 per 100 people

Cable television subscribers [CHINA] 139 million 11 per 100 people

[U.S.] 110 million 37 per 100 people Airline passengers [CHINA] 160 million

[U.S.] 658 million Foreign visitors [CHINA] 22 million 9% from the U.S.

[U.S.] 51 million 1% from China

Private cars [CHINA] 11.5 million 9 per 100 people

[U.S.] 136.4 million 450 per 1,000 people

Deaths in traffic conditions [CHINA] 89,455

[U.S.] 48,433 Practicing doctors [CHINA] 1.97 million 15 per 10,000 people

[U.S.] 745,000 25 per 10,000 people

Feature films produced [CHINA] 330

[U.S.] 699

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MANOJ, a police officer stationed in Mumbai, on why he and other police don't criticize their leaders for failing to meet promises to improve dire working conditions after last fall's deadly attacks on the Taj hotel

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