The graph illustrates how much a typical increase in gross domestic product in terms of Wealthy countries, Globalisers, and Non-globalisers in a four-decade between 1960s and 1990s.
Overall, while grass domestic product such as globalisers experienced a rapid increase in the percentage over the period, there was a slight decrease in the proportion of average annual wealthy countries.
Regarding average annual globalisers and wealthy countries, initially in 1960s, the former was the lowest among two figures with approximately 1.4 %. After its annual average growth saw a dramatic rise and became the highest, from 1.4% to approximately 5.0%, between 1960s and 1990s. In contrast, the latter began with significant dominance in the first decade and decreased gradually, from under 5.0% to about 2% from 1960s to 1990s.
As for the proportion of average annual (GDP) of non-globalisers, in 1960s, it went up slightly from approximately 2.4% to around 3,2% and became the highest in 1970s. Furthermore, it saw a slight dip by around 2.3% in 1980s, and rose up by 0,6% (around 1.5%) over the last year.
