The Elephant and the Dragon: The Economic Rise of India and China, and What It Means for the Rest of Us
Author: Robyn Meredith
A compelling look at the major changes in store as America faces increasing competition from two emerging Asian giants.
In the streets of India, camels pull carts loaded with construction materials, and monkeys race across roads, dodging cars. In China, men in Mao jackets pedal bicycles along newly built highways, past skyscrapers sprouting like bamboo. Yet exotic India is as near as the voice answering an 800 number for one dollar an hour. Communist China is as close as the nearest Wal-Mart, its shelves full of goods made in Chinese factories.
Not since the United States rose to prominence a century ago have we seen such tectonic shifts in global power; but India and China are vastly different nations, with opposing economic and political strategiesstrategies we must understand in order to survive in the new global economy. The Elephant and the Dragon tells how these two Asian nations, each with more than a billion people, have spurred a new "gold rush," and what this will mean for the rest of the world.
Publishers Weekly
Meredith, who covers India and China for Forbes, upends conventional wisdom in this well-reported book, arguing that the U.S. shouldn't fear these two rising economic powers. The U.S. ("buyer to the world") and China ("factory to the world") have, respectively, the largest and fourth largest economies, but they will reach parity in 2015. Though American politicians tax Chinese goods, Meredith points out that Americans actually gain from the undervalued yuan: our companies profit from the cheap goods the Chinese manufacture. Meanwhile, India ("backoffice to the world") has picked up most of the one million white-collar jobs that moved out of the U.S. by 2003. But Meredith notes that for every dollar that goes overseas, $1.94 of wealth is created-all but 33 cents of which returns to the U.S. Protrade and antiprotectionist, she makes a compelling argument that China is doing better than India because it moved toward a market economy in 1978, while India began to liberalize in 1991. She also looks critically at each country's plans for the future, noting that China's citizens save more, while India's infrastructure and education system are falling behind. She concludes that "if inward-facing India and communist China can transform themselves, so can the United States of America." (July)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business InformationSteve Forbes - Forbes Magazine
The book to read on the extraordinary economic expansions of India and China, the two most populous nations on Earth. FORBES Senior Editor Robyn Meredith has produced a well-written and well-researched work chronicling and analyzing the most profound, tectonic shift in economics since the rise of the U.S. Even Japan's fabled and stunning economic surge from the rubble of World War II doesn't compare with what's unfolding in these once poor and stagnant nations, with their collective populations of more than 2.4 billion people. (3 Sep 2007)
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