For the relatively richer economies of the poor world, like Brazil or Mexico, growth was so strong as to place them on trajectories of rapid convergence with Europe and the United States. Had Brazil’s per capita GDP continued to grow at its 1970–75 average rate for twenty-five more years, it would have been richer than France and the United Kingdom by the year 2000. With the ineluctable march of progress and growth so evident, everything seemed to be going according to plan. It was these strong performances that allowed the modernization theorist Rostow to predict, as he did to John F. Kennedy in 1961, that nations like Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela, India, the Philippines, Taiwan, Turkey, and Greece would “attain self-sustaining growth by 1970,” along with “possibly” Egypt, Iran, Iraq, and Pakistan.