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Eating your lunch?

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Title: No Slide Title Author: ADI Last modified by: ebeira Created Date: 6/23/1999 11:06:07 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Other titles – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Eating your lunch?


1
  • Eating your lunch?
  • Chinas economic success should be seen more as
    an opportunity than a threat
  • But most of the economic fears that China arouses
    that it will drive everybody else out of
    business, that it will always be
    super-competitive in everything, that it will
    cause mass unemployment are plain wrong. They
    ignore all the benefits of Chinas growth. They
    also ignore elementary economics.
  • The world has been here before....
  • Chinas contribution to world demand is vital ...
  • (The Economist, editorial, 15-21 February 2003)

2
  • A billion blessings
  • Millions of consumers in other countries are
    gaining from the low prices and high quality of
    Chinese goods.
  • A billion Chinese are escaping the dire poverty
    of the past.
  • Business across the globe will profit from
    supplying a vast new market.
  • These are wonders to be celebrated, not threats
    to be agonised over.
  • (The Economist, editorial, 15-21 February 2003)
  • See alsoIs the wakening giant a monster?
  • The Economis, 15-21 February 2003, pg. 65-67

3
  • Financial Times
  • I How cheap labour, foreign investment and
    rapid industrialisation are creating a new
    workshop for the world (FT, 4 February 2003, pg.
    13)
  • II Cut throat competitors 86 of goods are
    over- supplied, yet factories run at full tilt as
    prices are slashed (FT, 5 February 2003, pg. 11)
  • III A better life on the production line (FT,
    6 February 2003, pg. 7)

4
  • Macau
  • A gate to the Pearl River Delta (South China Sea)
  • as well as Hong Kong
  • both autonomous SARs (Special Administrative
    Regions) of PR China
  • both cultural interfaces between occidental and
    oriental markets
  • borders with Guangdong province of PR China
  • Guangdong pecial economic zones
  • Dongguan (running shoes)
  • Shunde (microwave ovens)
  • Zhogshan (electric lighting)
  • Zhuhai (computer games consoles, golf clubs)
  • Shenzhen (photocopiers, artificial Christmas
    trees, WallMart purchasing centre )

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