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Playing Our Game: Why China's Economic Rise Doesn't Threaten the West

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Conventional wisdom holds that China's burgeoning economic power has reduced the United States to little more than a customer and borrower of Beijing. The rise of China, many feel, necessarily means the decline of the West--the United States in particular.

Not so, writes Edward Steinfeld. If anything, China's economic emergence is good for America. In this fascinating new book, Steinfeld asserts that China's growth is fortifying American commercial supremacy, because (as the title says) China is playing our game. By seeking to realize its dream of modernization by integrating itself into the Western economic order, China is playing by our rules, reinforcing the dominance of our companies and regulatory institutions. The impact of the outside world has been largely beneficial to China's development, but also enormously disruptive. China has in many ways handed over--outsourced--the remaking of its domestic economy and domestic institutions to foreign companies and foreign rule-making authorities. For Chinese companies now, participation in global production also means obedience to foreign rules. At the same time, even as these companies assemble products for export to the West, the most valuable components for those products come from the West. America's share of global manufacturing, by value, has actually increased since 1990. Within China, the R&D centers established by Western companies attract the country's best scientists and engineers, and harness that talent to global, rather than indigenous Chinese, innovation efforts. In many ways, both Chinese and American society are benefiting as a result. That said, the pressures on China are intense. China is modeling its economy on the United States, with vast consequences in a country with a small fraction of America's per-capita income and scarcely any social safety net. Walmartization is not something that Asian manufacturing power is doing to us; rather, it is how we are transforming China.

From outsourcing to energy, Steinfeld overturns the conventional wisdom in this incisive and richly researched account.

280 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 5, 2010

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Edward Steinfeld

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Hunter Marston.
411 reviews19 followers
April 25, 2015
Long on economics, short of politics. I think Steinfeld's most interesting conclusions were in the last chapter. The case study on CNOOC in the Energy chapter helped his case but his argument was underdeveloped and the dense economic data in the middle lost the argument's thread. For me, it may have been the failure of the editors rather than the writer to arrange the bulk of the material effectively. In the end, I wish I could give the book 4 stars for actually wagering a fairly bold thesis, but I felt it was spoiled by the shortcoming of its construction.
Profile Image for Lourdes Mejía.
49 reviews
April 25, 2020
Bastante informativo si no sabes nada de la integración de China a la producción global y el desarrollo que ha tenido con el paso de los años. En mi caso, un buen primer acercamiento para entender la posición de China en la economía mundial y qué tanto la influencia política controla el desarrollo de nuevas industrias o el camino que tomarán en su desarrollo económico.
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