The difference between you, and the other Chinese mentioned in the OP is that you seem to have a first-hand understanding of the west (lived/living in the west), while he showed the opposite.Quote from heech:
I'm not even sure why I'm engaging in this "discussion" here... I guess it's a lazy Sunday afternoon, why not.
Do you really think its a question of "choice"? If we transported you to China and got rid of your Western passport, would you still "choose" to work smarter and be more productive? And the Chinese who work in the West and get compensated very well, did we simply "choose" to be paid more?
In the year 2011, the West is rich for the same reason that Paris Hilton remains rich: you were born with it. You're inheriting the wealth of past generations. The capital that your ancestors accumulated still paying off today... even if GDP growth is just 1% today (versus 10% in China), the fact is, America is still creating far more value every year than China is.
I'm not going to get into a long discussion about *why* the West already had more capital ... those of you who study history already know why, and those who don't will just turn this into a pointless argument. The point is, the world has fundamentally changed. And I for one believe that we're well past the tipping point, with China's future growth becoming an irresistible force.
I would further bet that if you were in China, they would still favor that guy over a person like you, because of possible patronage mentality. So China may not be a meritocracy if rewards are tangible (monetary/power) and immediate.
The GDP point is good now, but would it scale/be maintained. The GDP per capita may reach a flat line below the west.