Is There A 'Third Way' to Engage China?
Series: Global Ethics Corner
From: Carnegie Council
Length: 00:02:00
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Created and managed by Carnegie Council Ethics Studio and written by Senior Fellow William Vocke, Global Ethics Corner is a weekly 2 minute segment devoted to newsworthy ethical issues.
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Piece Description
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Created and managed by Carnegie Council Ethics Studio and written by Senior Fellow William Vocke, Global Ethics Corner is a weekly 2 minute segment devoted to newsworthy ethical issues.
Transcript
Managing the Chinese relationship is often described as the key challenge of this century.
For instance, from 2005 to 2010 the US economy grew by 5 percent and China's by 69 percent. Defense budgets grew by 36 percent and nearly 600 percent.
The implications often lead analysts to favor confrontation, accommodation, or an awkward blend of both.
Regarding confrontation, some see the rise of China as analogous to the rise of Germany before WWI. In this vision, China is a revisionist power undermining the global status quo, bent on resuming a rightful place in the sun after 150 years of denial, assertive in military security, and pursuing a mercantile, beggar-thy-neighbor economic strategy.
Favoring accommodation, China has used the term "peaceful rise," and now talks about developing a "harmonious world" abroad. Here, China willingly engages in global institutions, cooperates on issu...
Read the full transcript
Additional Credits
Deborah Carroll- Producer
William Vocke- Writer
Joel Rosenthal – Voice Talent
Julia Kennedy- Content Editor, Producer/Host of Just Business
Robert Smithline- Editor
Terence Hurley- Editor
Ina Pira- Production Assistant
