‘Can countries get rich without getting fat?’: Zerodha’s Nikhil Kamath questions bloated economies

Rate this post


Can a country get rich without getting fat? It’s a million dollar question about Zeroda’s co-founder Nicely Arath, which turned off in X.

In a world where growing economies pack pounds, Japan is the rich nation that can lean thin. So what does it give? And others can follow suit or close fragile zones part of the transaction when nations increase their GDP.

Capir divided the hard truth in his post. The rich countries are fat, and poor countries are not. In rich countries, the pace of obesity is 55%, and the poor hover about 22%. But Japan? At 5.6% obesity, they have broken the code and stand alone in the world’s best economies.

Contrast is shocking. Luxembourg, one capacity per capita, weighs 18.9% obesity. Norway is not far away, income per capita per capita and 19.5% obesity.

Switzerland is 12.5% ​​obese per capita of $ 94,799 GDP. Even ultra-efficient Singapore cannot avoid fragile zone, 14% obesity and per capita is 88,429 GDP. But the real jaw-drop. The United States, where $ 77,980 GDP has 42.7% obesity, almost half of the population.

So how does Japan stay on Fat Club? For beginners, they eat differently in a very different way. Japanese diet is heavy on fish, vegetables and fermented food and light dairy, butter and meat.

The sizes of the department are small, and their culture stimulates “Hara Hachi Bu” – stopping when you are 80% full. Success to find a careless food corridor. Recycled foods take space in supermarkets, and schools are banned from open.

It doesn’t stop in food. Japanese cities are built for movement, and cycling is a daily life, and they have literally demanding that companies require that companies require companies to require companies every year.

Meanwhile, countries like India, the GDP per capita, took the 146th place in the 146th place and 7.51% obesity interest rate, view and are interested.

 
Report

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *