sexta-feira, 21 de janeiro de 2011
TEc asks "Should America take a tougher line with China?" - If it should come to that, yes. Not otherwise.
If, and only if, as the introduction to this debate suggests, China has adopted a tough line with the US it follows that the US must reciprocate.
As is often the case, between States there is no love lost.
China's quick rise coincided with the severe shake-up of the West's economy, rocked to foundations by the troubles brought on by the financial sector.
A sector that admittedly conspired successfully - by deceit - against the economy posing complex systemic questions.
It was Wall Street versus Main Street and it could not have lent a firmer helping hand to China.
To my mind China going from developing to developed country over time, boasting the world's second largest economy already is good news to mankind as a whole.
Checking the excesses of Chinese power as and when it is felt will be the task of current and future US Administrations.
It need be a tough line if indeed Chinese so-called nativism gets the upper hand turning the country into a bully under different guises.
The best way to face the challenges ahead though - perhaps the only effective one - is for US leadership in government and business to strengthen the country's fundamentals.
Mainly the rather badly shattered economic foundations that led to debt-fuelled excessive consumption becoming the prime growth-driver.
Unsustainable over time by definition.
As is often the case, between States there is no love lost.
China's quick rise coincided with the severe shake-up of the West's economy, rocked to foundations by the troubles brought on by the financial sector.
A sector that admittedly conspired successfully - by deceit - against the economy posing complex systemic questions.
It was Wall Street versus Main Street and it could not have lent a firmer helping hand to China.
To my mind China going from developing to developed country over time, boasting the world's second largest economy already is good news to mankind as a whole.
Checking the excesses of Chinese power as and when it is felt will be the task of current and future US Administrations.
It need be a tough line if indeed Chinese so-called nativism gets the upper hand turning the country into a bully under different guises.
The best way to face the challenges ahead though - perhaps the only effective one - is for US leadership in government and business to strengthen the country's fundamentals.
Mainly the rather badly shattered economic foundations that led to debt-fuelled excessive consumption becoming the prime growth-driver.
Unsustainable over time by definition.
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