China Shakes The World: The Rise of a Hungry Nation
By (Author) James Kynge
Orion Publishing Co
Weidenfeld & Nicolson
1st July 2009
2nd July 2009
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
332.0420951
Paperback
288
Width 128mm, Height 196mm, Spine 20mm
200g
The new China, the nation that in 25 years has changed beyond all recognition is becoming an industrial powerhouse for the world. James Kynge shows not only the extraordinary rise of the Chinese economy, but what the future holds as China begins to influence the world.
On the eve of the British industrial revolution some 230 years ago, China accounted for one third of the global economy. In 1979, after 30 years of Communism, its economy contributed only two per cent to global GDP. Now it is back up to five per cent and rising.Although China is already a palpable force in the world, its re-emergence is only just starting to be felt. Kynge shows China's weaknesses - its environmental pollution, its crisis in social trust, its weak financial system and the faltering institutions of its governments - which are poised to have disruptive effects on the world. The fall-out from any failure in China's rush to modernity or simply from a temporary economic crash in the Chinese economy would be felt around the world.Should the U.S. worry about China Most definitely but, by Kynge's account, for different reasons from the ones being raised on Capitol Hill.
James Kynge has been a journalist in Asia for 20 years, covering many of the big events that have helped shape the region, including the Tiananmen Square massacre in Beijing and the bursting of the Japanese 'bubble' in the late 1980s. For seven years he was China Bureau Chief of the Financial Times in Beijing, and is now the Pearson Group's chief representative in China.