CRE အမေရိကန်ပြည်ရှိ နိုင်ငံခြားရေး ရာကောင်စီက တရုပ်ကြီး အကြောင်း နှီး နှော ဖလှယ်ပွဲကျင်းပ၊

KyaemonNovember 7, 201113min1121

အမေရိကန်နိုင်ငံနဲ့တရုပ်နိုင်ငံ တို့ရဲ့စီးပွါးရေးနှစ်ရပ် မှာပြန်လည်ခွဲခွါပစ်လို့မရလောက်အောင် တခုတည်းသောစီးပွါးရေး စနစ်ကြီး အဖြစ် အရမ်းပူးပူးကပ်ကပ် ပူးပေါင်း ပေါင်းစည်းသွားပြိဖြစ်ကြောင်း Karabell  ကပြော၊

ကမ်ဘာ့စီးပွါးရေး ကောင်းမွန်တိုးတက်ဘို့အရေး မှာ ယင်းသို့ပူးပေါင်းလိုက်တဲ့စီးပွါးရေးအ ပေါ်အမှီသဟဲ  ပြု နေရတယ်လို့ပြော

The U.S.-Chinese Economic Relationship: Symbiotic or Antagonistic (Video) – YouTube

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Ks69n73UMY

The U.S.-Chinese Economic Relationship: Symbiotic or Antagonistic (Video)

Uploaded by cfr on May 18, 2011

ORIGINALLY RECORDED October 15, 2009

Watch experts discuss the U.S.-Chinese economic relationship including trade policy and the Chinese purchase of American debt.

SPEAKERS:
Zachary Karabell, President, River Twice; Author, Superfusion: How China and America Became One Economy and Why the Worlds Prosperity Depends on It
Stephen S. Roach, Chairman, Morgan Stanley Asia; Author, The Next Asia: Opportunities and Challenges for a New Globalization
Adam Segal, Maurice R. Greenberg Senior Fellow for China Studies, Council on Foreign Relations


PRESIDER:
David R. Malpass, President, Encima Global LLC

http://www.cfr.org/china/us-chinese-economic-relationship-symbiotic-antagonis…

Zachary Karabell

President, River Twice Research

Posted: October 16, 2009 03:10 PM

Superfusion: How China and America Became One Economy and Why the World’s Prosperity Depends on It

Zachary Karabell: Superfusion: How China and America Became One Economy and Why the World’s Prosperity Depends on It

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/zach-karabell/superfusion-how-china-and_b_324098.html

For now, the relationship between the two economies is symbiotic, and is providing a degree of stability to both societies. In the absence of Chinese money, the Obama administration could not be spending its way out of recession, and without American companies operating in China and without Americans purchasing Chinese goods, China wouldn’t have the money to lend and spend. But no country likes to see its sovereignty eroded and its ability to be master of its own fate undermined — and that is precisely what the economic relationship between the China and the United States does to their respective governments. National sentiment in both countries is also strongly suspicious, and that is likely to intensify.

But for now and for many years to come, we are joined at the hip, China and the United States, and how that relationship is managed by both will determine whether the world ahead is one of increased prosperity or ever-more conflict between winners and losers, between haves and have-nots, and between powers on the rise and powers on the decline.

Superfusion

How China and America Became One Economy
and Why the World’s Prosperity Depends on It

RiverTwice Research :: Home

http://www.rivertwice.com/superfusion.htm

Superfusion | NewAmerica.net

http://newamerica.net/events/2009/superfusion

Preoccupied with the threat of terrorism and wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the United States soon found itself deeply in debt to China while also reaping the rewards of China’s growth.

BOOK REVIEW

Look who’s come to dinner

Superfusion by Zachary Karabell 

Reviewed by Benjamin A Shobert 

Feb 6, 2010

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China_Business/LB06Cb01.html

Karabell goes further, writing that “Chinese consumption has been a more important factor than most acknowledge … Contrary to claims that a third or even more of China’s growth was due to exports, the actual figure was closer to 15% and perhaps much lower.” It is likely Karabell makes this point to dislodge the singular fixation many American policymakers hold that China should only be understood as a predatory exporter. It also reinforces the importance of viewing access to the Chinese domestic market as an important political goal as well as a business strategy that forward-thinking corporations need to put in place. 

American thinkers such as Karabell are particularly important at this moment, when US confidence has been rocked and its beliefs about what the future holds appear hollow and shallow. Karabell notes, as have many before him, that China’s rise is no more certain than America’s demise. Superfusion leaves the reader with a sense that the challenge in the next decade is not to stifle China’s rise, but rather to restore America as the beacon of entrepreneurship and innovation it once was, to view China as an opportunity for growing the US economy and not a threat to its people’s standard of living. 

Superfusion: How China and America Became One Economy and Why the World’s Prosperity Depends on It by Zachary Karabell. Simon & Schuster (October 13, 2009). ISBN-10: 141658370X. Price US$26, 352 pages. 

Benjamin A Shobert is the managing director of Teleos Inc (www.teleos-inc.com), a consulting firm dedicated to helping Asian businesses bring innovative technologies into the North American market

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