內容簡介 | Overview
Rapid and often chaotic industrialization of the world's most populous country has put China on a collision course with the rest of the world. Peter Navarro of the University of California-Irvine maintains that the coming struggle will be over everything from decent jobs and leading edge technologies to strategic resources such as oil and copper and, eventually, to the most basic of all needs -- water and air.
Objectives:
Upon completing this segment, you will be able to:
.Point out the positive and negative consequences of the increasing amount of goods being exported from China into the United States;
.Focus on China’s laxity in complying with WTO labor and environmental regulations and intellectual property laws;
.Compare the risks and rewards of outsourcing and/or moving production to China;
.Assess the political and economic methods China is using to obtain raw materials from other less-developed countries.
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