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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Nicholas R. LardyPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield Imprint: Brookings Institution Dimensions: Width: 15.30cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.354kg ISBN: 9780815751359ISBN 10: 0815751354 Pages: 244 Publication Date: 01 December 2001 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsChina enters the World Trade Organization; China's pre-WTO trade reforms; China's accession to World Trade Organization; Implications of China's entry; China, the world economy, U.S. policy.ReviewsThis is the most comprehensive, thoughtful, and important treatment of China's involvement in the global economy that has been written to date. Lardy's detailed analysis of the opportunities and the challenges that both China and all its trading partners face is compulsory reading for leaders in government and business, as well as anyone else who wants to know a lot more about international commerce and finance in the years ahead. --Jeffrey E. Garten, dean, former undersecretary of commerce for international trade, Yale School of Management Lardy brilliantly describes China's steady integration into the global economy over the past two decades. His detailed description of China's far-reaching commitments to secure WTO membership and how they will transform its economy and expand opportunities for foreign entrepreneurs is essential reading for anyone interested in doing business in China. His insightful analysis of how China's transformation will affect the region and the global trading system makes this volume a must-read for policymakers as well. --Carla Hills, Chair and CEO, former United States Trade Representative, Hills & Company A top-notch Brookings Institution analyst of both China's byzantine politics and its economy, Lardy sifts fact from hype with fresh research and solid analysis on a host of issues... whether you're a bull or an alarmist, it will set the record straight. --Pete Engardio, BusinessWeek, 1/28/2002 [A] timely book on China's great leap into the World Trade Organization [that] provide[s] a first look at the implications of that event, impressed into history. --Bruce Gilley, Contributing editor at FEER, Far Eastern Economic Review, 12/13/2001 One of the most detailed investigations so far available. --Jasper Becker, South China Morning Post, 2/27/2002 ... just as valuable as [Lardy's] previous efforts: 'Integrating China into the Global Economy' is a solid attempt to take stock of China's economic progress to date and its progress over the next decade... 'Integrating China' uses current data and careful research to back up convincing arguments about where China's economy is today, and where it is headed... Each chapter can stand alone or as part of a larger discussion about what must happen for China's economy to continue to provide for its citizens. --Catherine Gelb, editor of The CBR, The China Business Review, 5/1/2002 The depth and complexity of [his] analysis alone makes Lardy's book essential reading for anyone seeking to understand Chinese trade politics. It's more than that, though... --Mark Johnson, Global Finance, 3/1/2002 A concise formulation of the reasons to forgo policies that would retard China's progress toward becoming an economic power. --Philipp Smaylovsky, New York University School of Law, The Georgetown Public Policy Review, 4/1/2002 ... an excellent analysis... impressive and convincing... This well-written book is a must for all students of the Chinese economy. It is the most comprehensive book of its kind, and its subject is timely. The level of analysis is deep, supported with insightful sector-specific details, and balanced, providing facts and depicting contrary arguments. --Tarhan Feyzioglu, Senior Economist, IMF Asia and Pacific Department, Finance & Development, 9/1/2002 'Integrating China' provides a tour through more than two decades of transition story about China's emergence onto the world economy, with one of the most knowledgeable and learned authorities in the field as the guide. It is certainly a valuable study-- serving beyond question not just as an essential reading for future scholarship, but also as a useful reference for practitioners of international business. --Yin-Ping Ho, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, The China Review, 10/1/2002 The breadth and quality of analysis is outstanding. --Stephen Green, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK, International Affairs, 7/1/2002 'Integrating China into the World Economy' is very well researched and well written. It is a must-read for anyone interested in understanding the economic impact China will have in coming years. --John F. Copper, Rhodes College, Asian Affairs, 7/1/2002 There are few topics more important than China's accession to the WTO, and there are few discussions of this topic more lucid than Lardy's. This is a 'must read'... for policy-makers in Washington. --Joseph Fewsmith, Boston University, The China Journal, 1/1/2003 ... we have the new book by Nicholas Lardy, certainly the most experienced and knowledgeable academic specialist in this field. Lardy is an exceptionally persuasive analyst who has worked on a wide variety of Chinese economic topics over the past thirty years. In his last two books, Lardy has left us all in his debt for illuminating the issues so brilliantly, while at the same time enabling us to take out a sophisticated hedge on the results. --Christopher Howe, School of Oriental and African Studies, Journal of Asian Studies Those who wish to understand the complexity of the international trading system, the gaming of rules that goes on, and the growing importance of China in the world economy will do well to read Lardy's fascinating book. Those who see China as a threat and disparage engagement as a sound foreign-policy strategy would do well to study Lardy's book. --James A. Dorn, Cato Institute, Cato Journal, 1/1/2003 It presents sober and reasoned analyses of these issues and represents a solid attempt to take stock of China's economic progress to date and its prospects over the coming decade --Laixiang Sun, The China Quarterly, 1/1/2003 Author InformationNicholas R. Lardy is a senior fellow at the Institute for International Economics and a former senior fellow in the Foreign Policy Studies program at the Brookings Institution. His previous books include China in the World Economy (Institute for International Economics, 1994) and Foreign Trade and Economic Reform in China, 1978-1990 (Cambridge, 1992). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |