| Selected Product: | In the Jaws of the Dragon: America's Fate in the Coming Era of Chinese Hegemony Hardcover Author: Eamonn Fingleton Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books Release Date: 2008-03-04 ISBN-10: 0312362323 ISBN-13: 9780312362324 List Price: $25.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The Post-American World ISBN-10: 039306235X ISBN-13: 9780393062359 List Price:$25.95 Bad Money: Reckless Finance, Failed Politics, and the Global Crisis of American Capitalism ISBN-10: 0670019070 ISBN-13: 9780670019076 List Price:$25.95 The Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash ISBN-10: 1586485636 ISBN-13: 9781586485634 List Price:$22.95 Churchill, Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World ISBN-10: 030740515X ISBN-13: 9780307405159 List Price:$29.95 Unsustainable: How Economic Dogma is Destroying American Prosperity ISBN-10: 1560255145 ISBN-13: 9781560255147 List Price:$14.95 | To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for In the Jaws of the Dragon: America's Fate in the Coming Era of Chinese Hegemony by Eamonn Fingleton (ISBN-10: 0312362323, ISBN-13: 9780312362324). At this time we have not yet written a review for In the Jaws of the Dragon: America's Fate in the Coming Era of Chinese Hegemony by Eamonn Fingleton (ISBN-10: 0312362323, ISBN-13: 9780312362324). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com
In recent years, popular wisdom has held that opening American markets to Chinese goods was the best way to promote democracy in Beijing---that the Communist Party’s grip would quickly weaken as increasingly affluent Chinese citizens embraced American values. That popular wisdom was wrong. As Eamonn Fingleton shows in this devastating book, instead of America changing China, China is changing America. Although this process of reverse convergence has been swept largely under the carpet by knee-jerk globalists in the American press, Americans will soon be hearing much more about it. Nowhere is the pattern more obvious than in business. Many top American corporations---Boeing, AT&T, the Detroit automobile companies, among them—openly collaborate with the Chinese Communist Party. In a stunning rejection of Western values, Yahoo! even provided the Chinese secret police with vital evidence that resulted in a ten-year jail sentence for one of its Chinese subscribers, a brave young dissident, under draconian censorship laws. Selling the American national interest short, countless other corporations abjectly do Beijing’s lobbying in Congress. This book---the culmination of twenty years of study---also breaks new ground by revealing the secret behind China’s phenomenal savings rate. Top leaders literally force the Chinese people to save through a highly counterintuitive---and, to ordinary citizens, virtually invisible---policy called suppressed consumption. This practice, which is to economics roughly what steroids are to sport, is fundamentally incompatible with Western ideas of fair global competition. It is reinforced by an Orwellian system of political control that, as Fingleton reveals, utilizes an ancient bureaucratic tool called selective enforcement---a form of blackmail that instills a silent reign of terror throughout Chinese society. Most worryingly, selective enforcement can readily be unleashed on any American corporation with interests in China---which is to say just about every member of the Fortune 500. While the Chinese people’s rising affluence is, of course, an occasion for wholehearted rejoicing, Uncle Sam should give the Chinese power system a wide berth---lest he catch his coattails in the jaws of a dragon. A must read for every westerner... | Customer Rating: | | In The Jaws Of The Dragon is a beautifully written analysis of the rise of China and the place of the U.S. in the alarming age of globalization. It documents what our policymakers have chosen to ignore and presents its case with astonishing clarity. This is a must read for every westerner. | Reverse convergence | Customer Rating: | In an evolution of economies that appears to confound the thesis of Fukuyama globalization is showing an unexpected new 'mutation' as the developing economic system of China is resisting the transition to democracy. The Chinese have reinvented the forms of capitalism, witness the shadow authoritarian tactics of increasing the savings rate. In the process of describing the Chinese case the book also illuminates the history of Japan in this regard. And American corporations have shown the shallowness of their allegiance to democratic principle by embracing this trend as they tread down the dangerous path of reverse convergence. I think in the end the result will prove its own undoing, and as the totalitarian Olympics approachs we see how the natural emergence of civil society if thwarted will prove an abortive result that the Chinese people must move to correct. | Excellent Book | Customer Rating: | | Anyone who has read "The World is Flat" should also read "In The Jaws Of The Dragon" to understand both sides of the issues involved in offshoring. Eamon Fingleton clearly defines the differences between the economic systems in play in China and Japan and the United States and how those differences have damaged the United States economy. The naive position taken by both the Republicans and the Democrats that offshoring is good for America is shown to be wrong because of a fundamental lack of knowledge about who we are dealing with. Every member of Congress and the executive branch should read this book before ratifying any more trade agreements. The old saying of the marketplace applies: Take advantage of me once, shame on you. Take advantage of me twice, shame on me. | An important book | Customer Rating: | This is a very well-written and thought-provoking book, and I would have liked to have given it 4.5 stars if it were possible.
I cannot give it the last half-star for one reason, and that is that I don't think the book does quite enough to stand on its own as a persuasive work to the uninitiated. At the very least, readers of this book should also read Fingleton's Blindside. Despite its unfortunate subtitle, Blindside is an absolute must-read offering the best exposition on the East Asian economic system to date. Points touched on in Jaws, such as the advantages of cartels and the reasons for favoring certain industries over others are treated in more depth in Blindside. In addition, I would also like to have seen some treatment in Jaws of China's relationship with Europe. I am left wondering to what extent the US's troubles with China also apply generally to the whole of the West.
Of course, Jaws is only one book, and there is still more than enough of interest here to make it an important and fascinating read. | The Disturbing Reality | Customer Rating: | | A veritable page-turner for anyone interested in the worst political mistakes of the modern West. Opening up American markets to communist China has not fostered the spread of a democratically inclined spirit but has had devastating effects on the U.S. economy that can no longer be ignored. Jaws should be mandatory reading for anyone with even a passing interest in the impending economic crisis that looms large on the Western horizon. Fingleton's conclusions are elegant, his evidence compelling, and the relevance of his book immeasurable. |
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