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Frenemies: Will China and the United States Live Happily Ever After?

Part two: Battle lines are drawn and erased

Special Report

Frenemies: Will China and the United States Live Happily Ever After?

Part two: Battle lines are drawn and erased

Special Report
Mike Richman
Wed, 05/30/2018 - 12:03
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All articles in this series
Made in China: From Scary Bad to Scary Good —Part 1
Frenemies: Will China and the United States Live Happily Ever After? —Part 1
Made in China 2025
Frenemies: Will China and the United States Live Happily Ever After? —Part 2
Made in China: From Scary Bad to Scary Good —Part 2
Tales of a Kitchen Remodel Sourced in the United States
China Comes to America to Talk Quality
How Chinese Products Went From Cheap and Cheerful to Trade War Weapons
Sino-U.S. Trade: Truth From the Shop Floor
Round Table Discussion: The State of Chinese Quality [VIDEO]
Body

In part one of this article, we discussed the origins of the United States and China, and how their relationship began to emerge.

Many people might point to the United States as the ultimate example of a laissez-faire, free market, unfettered capitalist system. Some would also say that China embodies a controlled, top-down, socialist paradise. There are elements of truth to these notions, but in a larger conception there are far more similarities than differences between the U.S. and Chinese economic systems.

The United States government has embraced certain quasi-socialist principles since at least 1933, when the country, led by president Franklin D. Roosevelt, was driven by desperation to create monetary redistribution policies and social safety nets. Since that time, support programs have proliferated, causing more than a few moneyed interests to pine for the good old days of 60-hour work weeks and nonexistent regulations.

The latent power of the Chinese economy, a sleeping giant so long anticipated and feared, began to rouse.

 …

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Comments

Submitted by Devin Ellis (not verified) on Thu, 05/31/2018 - 13:23

Absorbing Read with Great Incite

Mike Richman has given us a great perspective on the "how's" and "why's" of our World ecomomy today. The real contributors to our current economic situation have endured so many contrary opinions that it is refreshing to see a writer sum it up so succintly. A very engrossing read. 

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Submitted by Mike Richman on Fri, 06/01/2018 - 17:49

In reply to Absorbing Read with Great Incite by Devin Ellis (not verified)

Many thanks!

Hello, Devin! I very much appreciate your kind thoughts. These are extremely complex topics and I only just scratched the surface in 4,000 words, but hopefully it sets the table for the other content in our series on the many facets of the U.S.-China relationship. Have you read the other articles we've posted on this topic? If so, what did you think? Thanks again for your readership!
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