China versus the West : the global power shift of the 21st century.
The author, a leading specialist on the international and Asian economy and business, presents the most comprehensive picture of the changing power balance between the emerging superpower China and the "old" developed economies of the West: mainly the US, Europe and Japan. The reader can c...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Hoboken :
John Wiley & Sons,
2011.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- China Versus the West: The Global Power Shift of the 21st Century; Contents; Foreword by Yang Yongxin; Preface; Acknowledgments; Introduction by Frank-Jürgen Richter; Part One: China as the World's Leading Producing, Exporting, and Financial Power: To What Extent, Where, and Why?; Chapter 1: GDP: Toward the U.S.-China Duopoly; Notes; Chapter 2: Manufacturing Output: China Is Already the Number One; Note; Chapter 3: Merchandise Exports: From China's Lead to China's Dominance?; Chapter 4: Where China Is Leading and Where It Is Not.
- Group One Industries: China Is the Top Producer and the Top ExporterGroup Two Industries: China Is the Top Producer, but Not the Top Exporter; Group Three Industries: China Is Neither the Top Producer Nor a Major Exporter; Key Features of China's Manufacturing Lead; Anatomy of China's Merchandise Trade Surplus; Net Exporter and Net Importer Sectors; Domestic Private Companies Have Become the Major Surplus Creators; Note; Chapter 5: Chinese Domestic Manufacturers versus Western Manufacturers; The Four Segments Analytical Framework; Chinese Manufacturers' Global Offensive: Four Stages.
- Western Manufacturers: A New Way of Thinking Is RequiredOption One: Stay at Home and Differentiate the Product; Option Two: Move to China; Western Governments Have to Initiate an Export Counteroffensive; Chapter 6: A Big Battle for the Chinese Market; China-Bound Exports of Capital Goods: East Asia Is Leading; China-Bound Exports of Consumer Goods: Opportunities Are There, but You Have to Work Hard Not to Miss Them; China Trap; At-Home Chinese Companies Are Active in the High-End Niche; Competition with Domestic Capital Goods Makers Is Getting Really Tough.
- Chapter 7: Global Services Market: The West's Edge and China as Number FiveChina Joins the Ranks of Leading Services Exporters, but the United States Is Far Ahead; China's Trade Deficit; China Has a Structural Weakness in Services That Is Difficult to Overcome; The U.S. and EU Surpluses in the Services Trade with China Are Meager; The Right Time to Capture the Chinese Market; Note; Chapter 8: Is China a New Financial Superpower?; China's Overseas Assets; 3 Trillion-Plus Foreign Reserves: Implications for China and for the West.
- China Has Become the Largest International Lender for Developing CountriesChina's Outbound Foreign Investment: Accelerating, but the Lag Remains; Chinese Households' Financial Assets: Still Tiny; Is China a New Financial Superpower? Yes and No; Conclusions; Part Two: The Global Downturn and Beyond: Western Capitalism and Chinese Capitalism; Chapter 9: The Global Crisis Was Not Really Global; Chapter 10: Western Crisis: Three Major Factors; Unaffordable Consumption and Households Deeper in Debt; Gambling Capitalism; The Failure of State Regulation, Corporate Governance, and Business Morality.
- Chapter 11: Still, Western Capitalism Is Alive, But ...