While America is still reeling from the 2008
financial crisis, a high unemployment rate, and a
surge in government debt, China’s economy is the
second largest in the world, and many predict it
will surpass the United States’ by 2020. President
Obama called China’s rise “a Sputnik moment”—will
America seize this moment or continue to treat China
as its scapegoat?
Mainstream media and the U.S. government regularly
target China as a threat. Rather than viewing
China’s power, influence, and contributions to the
global economy in a negative light, Ann Lee asks,
What can America learn from its competition?
Why did China recover so quickly after the global
economic meltdown? What accounts for China’s
extraordinary growth, despite one of the highest
corporate tax rates in the world? How does the
Chinese political system avoid partisan rancor but
achieve genuine public accountability? From
education to governance to foreign aid, Lee details
the policies and practices that have made China a
global power and then isolates the ways the United
States can use China’s enduring principles to foster
much-needed change at home.
This is no whitewash. Lee is fully aware of China’s
shortcomings, particularly in the area of human
rights. She has relatives who suffered during the
Cultural Revolution. But by overemphasizing our
differences with China, the United States stands to
miss a vital opportunity. Filled with sharp insights
and thorough research, What the U.S. Can Learn from
China is Lee’s rallying cry for a new approach at a
time when learning from one another is the key to
surviving and thriving.
Winner of the Gold IPPY award in the category of
current events.
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