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In Line Behind a Billion People: How Scarcity Will Define China's Ascent in the Next Decade Kindle Edition
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPearson FT Press
- Publication dateAugust 26, 2013
- Reading age18 years and up
- File size5473 KB
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Editorial Reviews
From the Back Cover
“The hardest challe nge in making sense of China’s potential is balancing an awareness of its strengths and possibilities with an appreciation of the obstacles and pitfalls it confronts. Damien Ma and William Adams have found a wonderful, original, and convincing way to portray this tension between China’s strengths and its vulnerabilities. I hope that anyone who plans to do business with, or even think about, China will read their book.”
—James Fallows, The Atlantic Monthly, author of China Airborne
“If you want to know what keeps Chinese President Xi Jinping awake at night, read this book. It describes the daunting economic, environmental, social, and political problems facing China with lively, jargon-free writing and highly informative facts and graphs. A readable, balanced and comprehensive account that I’ll recommend to anyone traveling or doing business in China, and to college teachers.”
—Susan L. Shirk, Chair, 21st Century China Program, Ho Miu Lam Professor of China and Pacific Relations, School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, UC-San Diego
“Looking at China through the lens of scarcity rather than abundance is like seeing an infrared picture of a familiar landscape; all sorts of unfamiliar features pop out. Ma and Adams offer a comprehensive, absorbing, and richly detailed account of the many problems on China’s horizon, without falling into boosterism or prophecies of doom. Above all, they underline time and again how China’s scarcities will reshape the global landscape. A valuable read.”
—Anne-Marie Slaughter, Bert G. Kerstetter ’66 University Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Princeton University; former director of Policy Planning, United States Department of State
“Damien Ma and William Adams provide an important lens for understanding China’s realities and its future potential. While most of the world’s attention has focused on China’s astonishing growth, Ma and Adams concentrate on the various types of scarcity—from physical resources to social capital to values and political institutions—that confront its leaders and citizens alike. The volume paints a realistic and sobering picture of the country’s profound challenges; it then concludes by placing the future squarely in the hands of political leaders who can still tap huge unrealized potential if they boldly adopt the right reforms. Overall, a stimulating and provocative analysis.”
—Kenneth Lieberthal, Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution
“If you think of China as a country of unstoppable economic and political might, read this book and reflect again. Plain sailing does not lie ahead for Beijing. Adams and Ma argue convincingly that dealing with resource scarcities, as well as social and environmental problems, will almost inevitably replace maintaining high output growth as Beijing’s principal preoccupation. Their picture of social and economic conditions in China today and challenges facing the country is in my view remarkably accurate, comprehensive, and up-to-date. The economic miracle of the past three decades has not only reduced poverty on an unprecedented scale, but also generated social tensions and scarcities of many things, including clean air and water, arable land, many raw materials and public goods such as social justice, social security, food-, drug-, and workplace safety, healthcare and education services. The book explains the paradox of rapidly rising living standards on the one hand and growing social unrest and mistrust on the other. It also points to the international spillover effects of scarcities in China. A very readable and important new book on China.”
—Pieter Bottelier, Senior adjunct professor, Johns Hopkins University; former chief of World Bank Resident Mission in Beijing
“The authors decipher, in a very crucial way, what will really drive China as it becomes the largest economy in the world. China’s pace of growth will not be the issue, but understanding the levers of government, society, and business in China is instrumental for anybody who wants to be part of such an unprecedented growth story. A must read for business executives who are serious about doing business in China in the coming decades.”
—Mark Goyens, Former Asia President of Bekaert, currently business advisor to multinational corporations on growth strategies for China, based in Shanghai
“This book, which draws on the authors’ many years of living in China and their close personal and professional relationships there, is not just another polemic damning or praising China. It instead illuminates the realities and anxieties of a country poorly understood beyond its borders.”
—Zhang Bin, Senior Fellow, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences; Head, Department of Global Macroeconomics, CASS Institute of World Economics and Politics
China will soon have the world’s largest economy. But that’s the least important thing to know about China. This book reveals why China’s economic growth will constrain it, not empower it–and why China’s future will be shaped by the same reality that has shaped it for millennia: scarcity.
Damien Ma and William Adams drill deep into Chinese society, illuminating each of the scarcities that could limit China’s power and stall its progress. Beyond scarcities of natural resources and public goods, they explore China’s persistent poverties of individual freedoms, institutions, and ideological appeal–and the corrosive loss of values amongst a growing middle class shackled by a parochial and inflexible political system.
Everyone knows “the 21st century is China’s to lose”–but everyone’s wrong. Ma and Adams get beyond cheerleading and fear-mongering to tell the whole complex truth about China. These are truths you need to hear–whether you’re an investor, business decision-maker, policymaker, or citizen.
Will China dominate?
Can China survive?
Understand all the sources of scarcity reshaping China’s future:
• Resources
• Food
• Labor
• Social welfare
• Education
• Housing
• Ideology
• Values
• Freedom
About the Author
Damien Ma (Chicago, Illinois) is currently Fellow at The Paulson Institute, where he focuses on investment and policy programs, as well as the Institute’s research and think tank activities. Previously, Ma was a lead China analyst at Eurasia Group, a political risk research and advisory firm. He specialized in analyzing the intersection between Chinese policies and markets, with a particular focus on energy and commodities, industrial policy, U.S.-China relations, and social and Internet policies. Before joining Eurasia Group, Ma was a manager of publications at the U.S.-China Business Council in Washington, D.C. He writes regularly for The Atlantic Monthly Online and has been published widely, including in Foreign Affairs, The New Republic, Slate, and Foreign Policy. Ma is a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
William Adams (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is currently Senior International Economist for The PNC Financial Group. At PNC, Adams serves as spokesman on global economic issues and is responsible for its forecasts for China, other major emerging markets, and the Eurozone. Formerly resident economist at The Conference Board China Center, Adams has published extensively on China’s economic and financial reforms. He is a center associate and advisory board member of the University of Pittsburgh Asia Studies Center and a member of the economics advisory board of the Duquesne University Palumbo Donahue School of Business.
Product details
- ASIN : B00ESEMMPK
- Publisher : Pearson FT Press; 1st edition (August 26, 2013)
- Publication date : August 26, 2013
- Language : English
- File size : 5473 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Up to 5 simultaneous devices, per publisher limits
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 343 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,688,739 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #1,033 in Globalization (Kindle Store)
- #2,869 in International Business & Money
- #4,685 in International Economics (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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The consequences for what happens in China have broader implications for the rest of the world. What happens in China no longer stays in China. According to the authors, China now imports half of its oil, 60% of its soybeans and nearly all of its iron ore from other countries. China’s voracious and growing appetite for raw materials of all sorts cannot but effect both the availability and price of those goods for the rest of us. As the authors note: “Each Chinese only needs to consume half as much as an American to shake global energy and food markets.” Moreover, anything that leads to political and social instability in China would have international consequences.
I strongly recommend this book to anyone who is interested in thinking not only about China’s future but how China’s future will affect the future of the world. The book is written in a popular style that makes the complicated economic data that underpins the authors’ arguments accessible to most readers.
In Line behind a Billion People is particularly effective because it tackles the biggest questions about China's future in the methodical and grounded manner of experienced "real world" researchers, accustomed to having to explain China to those looking to invest or do business in the country. What emerges from the book's treatment of economic, political and social scarcity is a sense of the speed of change in China, and how nimble China's leaders will have to be to keep up.
Without sacrificing a measure of levity and perspective which makes In line a more compelling read than many of its contemporaries, Ma and Adams have produced a very credible argument for what will prove the defining tests for China and its leadership in the near future.
Top reviews from other countries
It is written in a very accessible style, but also contains plenty of statistics and some charts, and it is very well referenced, as such it is suitable for both academics and for “normal” people who are generally interested in China.
The book is unbiased (as unbiased as any book about politics and economics can realistically be!), and does not make any prescriptions for what China should do in the future, but instead indentifies problems that China is likely to encounter in the near future, if its economic and political policies remain unchanged.
One thing that I particularly like about the book is that it presents a real picture of what China is actually like for most Chinese people. More and more often these days writing about China, seems to be stuck in the Beijing/Shanghai elite paradigm; there is lots of talk about China's massive technological developments, the ever growing affluent middle class, and the reasonably liberal lifestyles that Chinese people today are enjoying. The general message seems to be that China is only a little bit behind the "West" (indeed ahead of it in some respects e.g. high speed trains) and will over take it very soon and usher in the Chinese Century.
If these writers could be bothered to sit on one of those amazing high speed trains for just 3 hours going west to Anhui province they would see what live is really like for the majority of Chinese people...
This book does not fall into such a trap, the authors come across as both knowledgeable academics and people who have clearly had first hand experience with Chinese culture and society, as it exists for most Chinese people.
The book is a little pricey when compared to what I normally spend on ebooks, but it was well worth the money. If you have even the slightest interest in China I recommend you read it.
Reading this book provided me with a lot of insights on well-known challenges in China like the need to replace unsustainable investment spending with more consumption or the environmental challenges of China as well as less well-known challenges like the flood of highly trained university gradates that cannot find enough jobs because of the country's specialisation on low cost production of goods. Such episodes are, however, where the weakness of the text enters, in my view. The book draws little to no comparisons to previous episodes of emerging markets in Asia like Japan in the 1960s or South Korea that managed to transform their economy from a low-tech, low-cost manufacturing economy to more high-tech manufacturing. It is unclear whether China will be able to achieve the same feat in the future. Also, the authors put very little analysis behind the possibilities and threats of a more open economy in China with less regulated capital flows and the possibility of Chinese academics to freely leave the country and look for jobs elsewhere.
Overall then I consider this book a very valuable work for everyone interested in the challenges China faces, but with a broader scope and more analysis it would have been even better.





