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The Mirage of Economic Size: Labor Surplus, PPP Illusions, Military Resilience, and Financial Power

Unpacking Balassa-Samuelson, Metric Misuse, Cost Advantages in Conflict, and Finance as Both Enabler and Weapon In nations like India, a vast labor surplus suppresses wages for essential non-tradable services—barbers charging ₹100 for a haircut, maids earning ₹8,000–15,000 monthly in cities, or plumbers handling jobs for a few hundred rupees. This abundance, rooted in informality and underemployment, fuels the Balassa-Samuelson effect, dramatically inflating GDP at purchasing power parity (PPP). India’s PPP GDP reaches around $18.9–19.1 trillion in 2026 estimates, ranking third globally, versus a nominal ~$4.1–4.5 trillion. While PPP captures domestic volumes well, it misleads on international power, trade leverage, and productivity. Nominal metrics at market exchange rates better reflect global realities. In existential domains, low-cost producers like China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea manufacture munitions and platforms at fractions of Western expense—Russia produces artillery...

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