Here's a book I will want to read as soon as I lay my eyes on it!
Also, the author's open mindedness as captured by The Economist is only too fitting of anyone knowledgeable on China and its intricacies.
Ambition aplenty and volumes to back it up is half the journey no doubt. Then there is everything else from within, so too the way other present-day major players match up to ongoing/future challenges.
Can anyone begin to imagine a world without America's Boeing or Europe's Airbus? Or scaled down to mere distribution points or commercial fronts?
What would that say about manufacturing, technology, skilled employment, real economy and wealth in the West?
Such questions whose answers seem so darn obvious to me were not even considered over the past 10-20 years, a time driven by quick-profit-only mentality prodded along by objectively weak, short-sighted, ignorant politicians.
That eventually became part of dominant culture as an inevitable? consequence of globalisation and free trade.
Now there appears to be the beginnings, on as yet minute scale, of a reverse process as wages and costs rise relevantly in China.
Predictable to any businessman with a vision and medium-to-long-term strategy.
For me it has never been about how high China will soar.
It is about how low many but not all countries in the West wish to plunge.
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