{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/5ee9ec25230d2813c150ac38/65461935c9f8f800113889ee?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"EP30 - Reading China in the Original","description":"<p>Occasionally you read a book that changes the way you think about a topic or a place.&nbsp;<em>The New China Playbook: Beyond Socialism and Capitalism</em> by Keyu Jin is just such a book and it was great to have her join me on TRIUM Connects.&nbsp;We discuss the consequences (both intended an unintended) of the one child policy, the combination of strong political centralisation and economic decentralisation, the ‘mayor economy’ and the combination of a super powerful yet agile state, able to act much more quickly than more democratically constrained actors.&nbsp;</p><p>Jin argues that to understand all of this, you need to read China in the original – that is, as much as possible, not through the lens of Western, capitalistic assumptions about economic development but to see it for what it does, within its own terms.&nbsp;</p><p>Jin is a great guide for this journey – she was born in China, educated in the USA (BA, Masters and PHD from Harvard) and now lives in London.&nbsp;&nbsp;She is an associate professor of economics at the LSE where her research focusses on global trade imbalances, global asset prices and China's economic growth model.&nbsp;&nbsp;Jin has also advised and consulted for the World Bank, the IMF and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.&nbsp;</p><p>The book ends with a discussion of the current challenges facing China.&nbsp;Jin argues that the reforms and policies which created the tremendous economic development over such a comparative short time must now change if China is to avoid its own version of the middle income trap.&nbsp;Whether China is able to do so will, in no small measure, shape the kind of world we will all live in.</p><p>&nbsp;Jin’s background, insight and deep knowledge shine through in the book and in our conversation. I hope you enjoy the conversation!</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><em>Citations</em></p><p>Keyu Jin (2023) <em>The New China Playbook: Beyond Socialism and Capitalism</em>. Viking Press.</p><p>Swerling J. and Burrows A. <em>Guys and Dolls</em> – First performed in 1950.</p>","author_name":"TRIUM Global EMBA"}