China's breakneck industrialization is placing it on a collision course with the entire world. Tomorrow's China Wars will be fought over everything from decent jobs, livable wages, and leading-edge technologies to strategic resources such as oil, copper, and steel...even food, water, and air. In The Coming China Wars, best-selling author Peter Navarro previews all these potential conflicts—and reveals the urgent, radical decisions that must be made to avoid catastrophe. You'll learn how China's thirst for oil is driving nuclear proliferation in Iran, genocide in the Sudan, even Japan's remilitarization. You'll discover China's shocking role in the drug trade and how its reborn flesh trade may help trigger tomorrow's worst AIDS crisis. Navarro also reveals how China has become the world's most ruthless imperialist...how it is promoting global environmental disaster... and, perhaps most terrifying of all, how this nuclear superpower and pirate nation may be spiraling toward internal chaos. The threat is real. We all must come to understand it and then act! Start here and now by arming yourself with the information and insights of The Coming China Wars. The "China Price": Conquering the world's export markets The real story behind China’s “weapons of mass production” China versus U.S.: The "blood for oil" flashpoints The coming U.S./China showdown over oil Pirate Nation: China's state-sanctioned thievery How China's counterfeit drugs and products can literally kill you Triggering tomorrow's worst AIDS crisis China's 21st century flesh trade: The seeds of a global health disaster "Peter Navarro has captured the breadth of areas where China and the United States have fundamental conflicts of business, economic and strategic interests. He puts this into a global context demonstrating where China's current development course can lead to conflict. His recommendations for nations to coalesce to respond to the challenges posed by China are practical. This book should be in the hands of every businessperson, economist and policy-maker." –Dr. Larry M. Wortzel, Chairman, US-China Economic and Security Review Commission "The Coming China Wars is a gripping, fact-filled account of the dark side of China's rise that will be of interest to anyone interested in this complex and fascinating country. Navarro makes no pretense toward searching for the middle ground in the China debate. He issues a call to arms for China and the rest of the world to act now to address the country's mounting problems–pollution, public health, intellectual property piracy, resource scarcity and more–or risk both serious instability within China and military conflict between China and other major powers." –Elizabeth C. Economy, C.V. Starr Senior Fellow and Director of Asia Studies, Council on Foreign Relations "What Al Gore does for climate change, Peter Navarro does for China. This book will hit you right between the eyes. A gargantuan wake-up call." –Stuart L. Hart, S.C. Johnson Chair of Sustainable Global Enterprise, Cornell University, Author of "Capitalism at the Crossroads" "The Coming China Wars has a wealth of fascinating
A Professor of Economics and Public Policy at the Paul Merage School of Business, University of California, Irvine and holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard University. He received several teaching awards in 2010 for the MBA programs that he teaches.
Navarro ran for office in San Diego, California, three times. In 1992, he ran for mayor, winning the primary race, but losing to Susan Golding in the runoff. In 1996, he ran for the 49th Congressional District, but lost to Republican Brian Bilbray. In 2001, Navarro ran in a special election to fill the District 6 San Diego city council seat, but lost in the primary.
Excellent. There is a lot to be concerned about with China. I agree with Mark Steyn that the weaknesses of our enemies are the greatest threat to us. China has a lot of internal problems. The book is also recommended by a CFR member. Highly ironic since those folks are busy doing all they can to break the might of America and to usher in the "New World Order". China is a huge threat. Hope people are paying attention when China is making moves to get the world to dump the dollar as the reserve currency. We will be toast when that happens.
this book was a waste of time read about putting (now) China as the prime enemy for USA...USA consumption was high, so no companies want to build products in USA because it is expensive and no one wants to get low paid..so naturally, companies move to China to build at low cost..revenue goes to the pockets of CEO, Executives, PE firm, Wall Street...then China became the world factory for US appetite for massive consumption..then China is the enemy??because their economy is risen?? as a OEM factory house?? Please read Peter Schiff who is better.
Everyone should read this book. And then boycott all products "made in China" until that country demonstrates some global responsibility, humanity, ethics and morals. It will amaze you to find out what the world has let China get away with - much of it funded by us purchasing their knock-offs and cheap goods.
This book is essentially a list of everything wrong about China without much context and with a lot of subjectivity. I'm very disappointed with the lack of real analysis and the absence of solutions that the title of the book signals exist. This is far less informative than other books about China and more of a pure "hit piece" on China.
Eye opening book about how China is impacting the whole world; and potentially changing more than just ecomonic conditions. You get what you pay for, and we are all about to pay a price much higher than the Made in China label would suggest. I would highly recommend this read.
When I read this book many of the trade anecdotes of flawed and contaminated Chinese manufactured products had not hit the press. Since, I often wonder about the dangers in the products that make it to our shelves.
In 2006 this book seemed alarmist, but now it is incredibly realistic. The author managed to predict most of the economic wars we have in 2025, even though much more subtle than Navarro thought will be.
Peter Navarro is worried about China and if you read his book, you are at the very least, you may well get concerned as well. The Coming China Wars details problems with Chinese production, quality control, human rights and environmental protection. He also points to Chinese foreign policy as an indicator that China is moving into peer competitor territory. Let's look at each in turn.
Navarro wants US consumers to limit buying Chinese goods, because it is not good for the American economy and because it supports bad Chinese work and environmental habits. He provides a number of cases of evidence for this, although some lean toward the anecdotal. Many times it is difficult to know the scale of the problems he is presenting. How much of the Chinese produced medicine is shoddy for example? I suppose the answer in that case is that one case is too many, but it can be hard to tell how serious the problems that Navarro presents are. His tone can reach the apocalyptic which reduces the appeal of his arguments to the unsure.
Quite a bit of the problems he relates call into question the ability of China to continue on its growth path. Internal divisions, more class than ethnic, are a problem. Environmental degradation is reaching critical levels and the wealthy classes will only go so long without a shift to a consumer culture. This is helpful, as most of the books you read tend to treat China's rise as inevitable.
On the foreign policy side, he portrays Chinese as a rapacious neo-imperialist creating new outposts places as far from Beijing as Central Africa and Latin America. This shouldn't be unexpected. China is growing more wealthy and powerful and as such it is spreading its wings. In few ways does this threaten the United States in any meaningful way. The Chinese Army, Navy and Air Force remain far behind the US and would not fare well in any conflict and the Chinese are sure to know this. Navarro strains credulity when he suggests Chinese anti satellite facilities on Cuba might lead to a new Cuban missile crisis.
So take a look at this book for some reasons to reconsider your shopping and for reasons to think that China's rise may stumble, but don't over-react.
This book is certainly written from the pro-american perspective: china is catching up, we(americans) must do something about it. China pursues same goals and uses same methods US has been doing in the past: putting developing countries in the credit debt pit and asking for resources in the end to payback. The author does not notice this obvious thing!
The prof talks about chinese manufacturing that poisons not just the american trades but all other smaller weaker economies. The 'china price' destroys any kind of competitive spirit on the global market - it is virtually impossible to compete with them. Chinese cut their costs on all levels: no pension plans, no paid vacation, no labour unions, workers are slaves, management, clusterism.
But not just that! The chinese emmisions in the air REACH CANADA & US - across the ocean! China pollutes not just its own air - but other countries as well.
An eye opening book to understanding the global ramifications of all of our actions. I also feel that if one reads it with an open mind, you will see how cyclical our world economy is...looks the same thing discussed in this book is about to happen in Vietnam. Basically if we are getting something cheap, it is usually balanced by an expense to someone else in the world. We read it for book club. My one complaint would be it was very doomsday with no answer son how to solve the problems. However, I understand there is a new edition out with an additional chapter which DOES offer solutions...my advice would be to get that edition.
After reading this book, I've found myself checking obsessively for the origin of products I buy, so the book accomplished it's task, but it wasn't a pleasant read. I know it's written to appeal to the same type of audience as Friedman's The World is Flat, but I found myself getting anxious each time I picked it up from the breathless tone of impending doom (accentuated by way to many commas). The use of quotes got tiresome, as well as the clever headlines. (Weapons of Mass Construction.
Bravo on the subject, but I was glad to put it down.
China is likely to be a much bigger problem than we want to believe. You thought we were consuming the earth's resources? The Chinese want what we have and more! And who can blame them when we have set the standard for consumerism. Don't expect them to settle for second best. But it is a recipe for disaster. A good corollary to Thomas Friedman's books: The World is Flat, and "Hot, Crowded and Flat".
An interesting book, not really enough detail and let down by some generalities. That said, an important introduction to China's context. Worth reading after some Chomsky, lest the reader be tempted to point fingers...
Although the author seems bias, I would recommend this book as it enlightens one on a wide range of important issues that are taking place not only in China, but around the world.
“[China] requires our understanding and engagement - not our enmity and suspicion, which could culminate in self-defeatingly creating the very crisis we fear.”
A line from the book? Hardly! Nevertheless, The Coming China Wars relates in an unmistakable to this quote, for it exemplifies in starkest terms the very enmity and suspicion that Will Hutton (2006) cautions against in “The Writing on the Wall: Why We Must Embrace China as a Partner or Face Her as an Enemy.” If the choice of title for the book itself fails to communicate the line of thought that pervades the book, the reader need not go any further than the author's introduction, which he begins with a fictitious October 25, 2012, News Release, entitled "U.S.-China Chill Melts Down World Markets." It remains highly debatable whether or not, as the author claims, "China has put itself on a collision course with the rest of the world," or whether that purportedly inevitable course is not possibly the result of a larger combination of factors, including not least highly de-contextualized and emotional analysis for which the United States, in the eyes of the noted German journalist and author, Peter Scholl Latour, appears to have a near infallible inclination in recent years. The Coming China Wars merely helps to further cement this perception.
In the author's own words, "this book is a carefully researched attempt to break free from the chains of repression and non-fact-based rhetoric that has characterized so much of the current debate" (p. 211) and "[T]he primary research for this book involved analyses of tens of thousands of pages of material from books, newspapers, magazines, scholarly journals, government agencies...international organizations..., "think tanks," and numerous websites and blogs" (p. 219). If the reader makes it through the book and resisting the temptation to throw it away after the first chapter, these comments are bound to trigger laughter. For such purportedly extensive research, the book offers nothing in terms of explanatory and objective analytical value. In fact, rather than steering away from non-fact-rhetoric, as Navarro claims, he did not hesitate to further contribute to it.
Of 217 pages, a grand total of 134 feature extensive, sometimes paragraph- or page-long quotes of various sources. It becomes quickly obvious that the text following these quotes is merely a descriptive and biased attempt at further extending the message in the original citation. My personal favorite was that the author, in his arguably diligent research has put primary emphasis on websites and blogs, as the bibliography clearly attests. He did not even hesitate to draw on Wikipedia as a source on two occasions - to define the notion of "realpolitik" (he did not even bother to look at the voluminous literature on realpolitik itself to provide an authoritative definition), and then in his discussion of China's dam building.
For a more extensive review, including detailed critical commentary on the various chapters,, see my review posted on Amazon.com.
Despite the provocative name this book mainly focuses on China's internal strife. Things that could cause an aggressive or unpredictable Chinese state in the future. I personally enjoyed this book more than his more recent "Crouching Tiger". But this book didn't give me much respect for the author because 25% of it was made up of quotes from various political magazines and newspapers. it felt more like extrapolations from those quotes and figures. They weren't unintelligent extrapolations, but I found myself thinking "another quote? really?"...
I enjoyed this book, it gave a lot of insights into the Chinese economy that I hadn't had previously. I recommend it to anyone who likes "China watching" as Dr. Navarro phrases it.
This book was a real eye-opener for me. How can we keep buying products from China when they abuse their people so badly? The money they get from us is used to buy nuclear weapons that they can use against us, and all the oil and minerals they can get their hands on regardless of the price. (Murder,Executions, torture are all part of their plan.) I wonder if they will use their nuclear weapons first, or succumb to their own poisons and pollutions. It was hard for me to believe just how sinister China's government is. It is inevitable we will someday have to deal with them either as a partner or at war. God help us!
The Coming China Wars by Peter Navarro is probably one of the most advertised China-related books this year. For weeks it nailed the small Adsense box on my Inside-out China blog (apparently Google did a good job of matchmaking), and I got so tired of seeing it all day everyday that I deleted Adsense. The book thus made my blog ad-free.
The author really lets his imagination roam free on the possible flashpoints between the world's only superpower and the nation that wants to be the next one. I came to this book as one who thinks the paths of history and national desire will bring the U.S. to loggerheads, be it military or not. However, even with my prior notions and reading, this book highlighted several interesting irritants that I had not known of. These include, China vs. Vietnam over the damming of the Mekong, the looming AIDS crisis in China (and India) and more.
Desde Leader Summaries recomendamos la lectura del libro China: conflicto a la vista, de Peter Navarro. Las personas interesadas en las siguientes temáticas lo encontrarán práctico y útil: innovación, globalización. En el siguiente enlace tienes el resumen del libro China: conflicto a la vista, La cara oculta del gigante asiático: China: conflicto a la vista
I thought this was a good read for me to better understand some of the economics and business strategies and politics around China and US trade. It could have been written better though!