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Overview"Chapters 1 and 10 from this book are published open access and free to read or download from Oxford Academic. After the miraculous economic growth known as the Beijing Consensus, China is now facing a slowdown. The attention has moved to the issue of the middle income trap. This book deals with this interesting issue in the context of China. It also discusses China's limitations and future prospects, especially after the rise of a new ""cold war"" between China and the US, namely the question of whether China would fall into another trap called the ""Thucydides trap"", or conflict with the existing hegemon as a rising power. In sum, this book plays around three key terms, namely, the Beijing Consensus, the Middle Income Trap, and the Thucydides trap, and applies a Schumpeterian approach to these concepts. It also conducts a comparative analysis that examines China from an ""economic catch-up"" perspective. An economic catch-up starts from learning and imitating a forerunner, but finishing the race successfully requires taking a different path along the road. This act is also known as leapfrogging, which implies a latecomer doing something different from, and often ahead of, a forerunner. Technological leapfrogging may lead to technological catch-up, which means reducing the technological gap, and then finally to economic catch-up in living standards (per capita income) and economic size (GDP: economic power). This linkage from technological leapfrogging and catch-up to economic catch-up corresponds exactly with a similar linkage from the Beijing Consensus to escaping (or not) the middle income and the Thucydides traps. One conclusion from this book is that China's successful rise as a global industrial power has been due to its strategy of technological leapfrogging, which has enabled China to move beyond the middle income trap and possibly the Thucydides trap, although at a slower speed." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Keun Lee (Professor of Economics, Professor of Economics, Seoul National University)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 24.00cm Weight: 0.580kg ISBN: 9780192847560ISBN 10: 0192847562 Pages: 292 Publication Date: 28 December 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsLee masterfully synthesizes his own thirty years of observation and analysis of China's technological achievement, providing a comprehensive theoretical framework and extraordinarily rich empirical content, especially in the telecom, automobile, and semiconductor sectors. As China's policy-makers gamble on a new generation of technological change, Lee shows how technological leapfrogging is an indispensable part of broader economic catch-up. Incomparable as a source of insight into the big technology issues shaping-and shaking-China and the world today. * Barry Naughton, Professor, University of California, San Diego; author of The Chinese Economy (2018) * Author InformationKeun Lee is a globally recognized scholar on economics of catch-up. Currently, he is a professor of Economics at the Seoul National University, Fellow of the CIFAR (Canada) program on Innovation, Equity and Prosperity, the Vice-chairman of the National Economic Advisory Council (for the President of Korea), and the director of the Center for Economic Catch-up. He is an editor of Research Policy, and an associate editor of Industrial and Corporate Change. He served as the President of the International Schumpeter Society, a member of the Committee for Development Policy of UN, and a council member of the World Economic Forum. He is the winner of the 2014 Schumpeter Prize for his monograph on Schumpeterian Analysis of Economic Catch-up (2013 Cambridge Univ. Press), as well as the 2019 Kapp Prize from the EAEPE, for his article on national innovation systems. He obtained Ph.D. in economics from the University of California, Berkeley, with his thesis on the Chinese economy. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |