Idea in Brief

The Problem

Although it is very likely that China will soon overtake the United States as the home to the highest number of Fortune 500 firms, that triumph could be short-lived.

Why It’s Happening

China’s Fortune 500 firms are heavily reliant on domestic revenues, and a rapidly falling working-age population will severely reduce domestic GDP growth in the absence of improvements in labor productivity (which are unlikely to occur). Japan provides an uncomfortable precedent for the consequences of this demographic shift.

The Solution

To keep their places on the Fortune 500, China’s domestic giants will have to develop a global mindset more characteristic of multinationals from small countries like Switzerland—a transformation that has to date eluded most of Japan’s businesses.

There’s no question that China is on the rise. In 2018, Fortune’s Global 500 ranking included 111 firms headquartered in China—just a handful fewer than the United States’ 126. In 1995, only three Chinese firms made the list; in 2018, three were in the top 10. No wonder some observers predict that China will soon overtake the U.S. as the home to the highest number of Fortune 500 firms.

A version of this article appeared in the September–October 2019 issue of Harvard Business Review.