Skip to product information
1 of 1

The China Boom

Regular price $120.00
Regular price $120.00 Sale price $120.00
Sold out
A systematic investigation into the origins and unraveling of China’s economic miracle.
  • 20 October 2015
View Product Details

Many thought China's rise would fundamentally remake the global order. Yet, much like other developing nations, the Chinese state now finds itself in a status quo characterized by free trade and American domination. Through a cutting-edge historical, sociological, and political analysis, Ho-fung Hung details the competing interests and economic realities that temper the dream of Chinese supremacy—forces that are stymieing growth throughout the global South.

Hung focuses on four common misconceptions: that China could undermine orthodoxy by offering an alternative model of growth; that China is radically altering power relations between the East and the West; that China is capable of diminishing the global power of the United States; and that the Chinese economy would restore the world's wealth after the 2008 financial crisis. His work reveals how much China depends on the existing order and how the interests of the Chinese elites maintain these ties. Through its perpetuation of the dollar standard and its addiction to U.S. Treasury bonds, China remains bound to the terms of its own prosperity, and its economic practices of exploiting debt bubbles are destined to fail. Hung ultimately warns of a postmiracle China that will grow increasingly assertive in attitude while remaining constrained in capability.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $120.00
Pages: 264
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Contemporary Asia in the World
Publication Date: 20 October 2015
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231164184
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / Asian, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / International / Economics & Trade, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Government & Business, HISTORY / Asia / China
REVIEWS Icon
[An] informative study.... [The China Boom] paints a convincing picture that China may not be the superpower many predicted it to be.
Ho-fung Hung is Henry M. and Elizabeth P. Wiesenfeld Associate Professor in Political Economy at Johns Hopkins University. He is the author of the award-winning book Protest with Chinese Characteristics: Demonstrations, Riots, and Petitions in the Mid-Qing Dynasty (Columbia, 2011).

List of Illustrations and Tables
Preface
Chronology of State Making and Capitalist Development in China, Sixteenth to Twenty-First Centuries
Introduction: Sinomania and Capitalism
Part I. Origins
1. A Market Without Capitalism, 1650–1850
2. Primitive Accumulation, 1850–1980
3. The Capitalist Boom, 1980–2008
Part II. Global Effects, Coming Demise
4. Rise of the Rest
5. A Post-American World?
6. Global Crisis
Conclusion: After the Boom
Notes
References
Index