Angela Merkel has overtaken outgoing Chinese President Hu Jintao - struck from the list entirely owing to his imminent departure - and claimed second place in Forbes' list of most powerful people. Only US President Barack Obama - an obvious choice at the best of times with the world's most powerful military and largest economy under his thumb, let alone when freshly re-elected - is ahead of the German chancellor.

Hu Jintao's replacement in waiting, the new general secretary of China's Communist Party, Xi Jinping, jumped in at nine, ahead of British Prime Minister David Cameron - the second-best positioned European politician.

The magazine named 71 people, saying this number was designed to reflect the estimated global population of 7.1 billion. In other words, they're aiming to showcase the top 0.000001 percent amongst all of us.

"There are 7.1 billion people on the planet. These are the 71 that matter," the magazine decrees at the top of its list.

Russian President Vladimir Putin held third position, with Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates the highest-placed businessman in fourth.

Facebook over Fox, computers over Catholics

Pope Benedikt XVI was next in line, with Catholicism narrowly trumped by computer software. But the man formerly known as Joseph Ratzinger shouldn't despair; he was the only theologian to make the grade.

Two public servants with their hands on the financial faucets made the top ten: with Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in sixth and European Central Bank boss Mario Draghi in eighth.

Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg, fresh from his company's IPO that was bad for investors but rather good for him, climbed to 25th place, one spot ahead of media master-mogul Rupert Murdoch.

Peacemakers were given short shrift on the list; UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon could only manage 30th spot, behind Italy's technocrat prime minister, Mario Monti.

The world of sports just scraped its way into the one-in-a-hundred-million club; FIFA President Joseph "Sepp" Blatter managed 69th position.

Forbes published the list in this week's edition, which hit the news stands on Wednesday in the US.

msh/rg (AFP, Reuters)