Wednesday, June 01, 2005

China, Inc.

This was the "daily dose" (recommended book of the day) sent to me from powells.com last Saturday. I thought it fitting, stemming from a few blogging experiences I encounterd a few weeks ago with fellow bloggers who firmly believed that China is going nowhere . . . I beg to differ:

"China, Inc.: How the Rise of the Next Superpower Challenges America and the World"
by Ted Fishman

PUBLISHER COMMENTS
China today is visible everywhere -- in the news, in the economic pressures battering America, in the workplace, and in every trip to the store. Provocative, timely, and essential, this dramatic account of China's growing dominance as an industrial super-power by journalist Ted C. Fishman explains how the profound shift in the global economic order has occurred -- and why it already affects us all. How has an enormous country once hobbled by poverty and Communist ideology come to be the supercharged center of global capitalism? What does it mean that China now grows three times faster than the United States? That China uses 40 percent of the world's concrete and 25 percent of its steel? What is the global impact of 300 million rural Chinese walking off their farms and heading to the cities in the greatest migration in human history? Why do nearly all of the world's biggest companies now have large-scale operations in China? What does the corporate march into China mean for workers left behind in America, Europe, and the rest of the world? Meanwhile, what makes China's emerging corporations so dangerously competitive? What could happen when China will be able to manufacture nearly everything -- computers, cars, jumbo jets, and pharmaceuticals-- that the United States and Europe can, at perhaps half the cost? How do these developments reach around the world and straight into the lives of all Americans?

2 Comments:

At 10:29 AM, Blogger Senor Guano said...

Another question that needs to be asked it what happens to American when all the cheap loans from China dry up and go away.

It could be very scary and interesting.

 
At 10:36 AM, Blogger Vance Jefferson said...

China's GDP is still 1/7th of the U.S.'s with 5 times as many people.

Thanks for the cool quote on my site. It was a good run while it lasted.
J

 

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