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U.S.-China economic competition : Gains and Risks in a Complex Economic and Geopolitical Relationship / Howard J. Shatz, Daniel Egel, Editors ; Nadia Almasalkhi, Daniel Egel, Aaron B. Frank, C. Ben Gibson, Timothy R. Heath, Khrystyna Holynska, King Mallory, Steven W. Popper, Howard J. Shatz, Alexandra Stark, Tobias Sytsma, Noosha Uddin, Jessie Wang.

Lippincott Library HF1456.5.C6 U83 2025
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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Shatz, Howard J., editor.
Egel, Daniel, editor.
Almasalkhi, Nadia, contributor.
Frank, Aaron B., contributor.
Gibson, C. Ben, contributor.
Heath, Timothy R., contributor.
Holynska, Khrystyna, contributor.
Mallory, King, contributor.
Popper, Steven W., 1953- contributor.
Stark, Alexandra, contributor.
Sytsma, Tobias, contributor.
Uddin, Noosha, contributor.
Wang, Jessie, contributor.
Rand Corporation. National Security Research Division
Rand Corporation, publisher.
United States. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
Series:
Research report (Rand Corporation) ; A1947-1.
Report ; A1947-1
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Competition, International.
Economic policy.
International trade.
Globalization.
United States--Foreign economic relations--China.
United States.
China--Foreign economic relations--United States.
China.
Economic Planning.
Economic Policy.
Geopolitical Strategic Competition.
International Trade.
Trade Regulation.
globalism.
Local Subjects:
China.
Economic Planning.
Economic Policy.
Geopolitical Strategic Competition.
Globalization.
International Trade.
Trade Regulation.
United States.
Physical Description:
xix, 319 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm.
Other Title:
United States-China Economic Competition
Place of Publication:
Santa Monica, CA : RAND Corporation, [2025]
Summary:
U.S.-China competition, including economic competition, has come to define U.S. foreign policy since 2017. The two economies are the first- and second-largest national economies in the world and are deeply intertwined. Changes to the relationship, however necessary, could be costly. The United States thus faces a challenge ensuring that its economy meets the nation's needs under conditions of coupled, strategic competition. To respond to this challenge, RAND researchers conducted economic and institutional analyses of U.S.-China competition, engaged in a participatory foresight exercise to understand the long-term path for ensuring U.S. economic health, and created two economic competition games exploring the dynamics of multiple countries trying to ensure their economic health while interacting with each other and the private sector. This report, the first of a four-part series, includes the economic and institutional analyses of U.S.-China economic competition. Individual chapters cover the Chinese concept of economic security; a stock-taking of China-related measures by the United States; an analysis measuring how intertwined supply chains are and options for disentangling them; a theoretical account of the effectiveness of cooperative versus restrictive modes of engaging with China and Chinese officials; and examinations of specific aspects of U.S.-China competition, including return migration of Chinese nationals from the United States to China, energy and environmental security, how Chinese privately owned enterprises might differ from Western private enterprises and implications for policy, and potential ways by which to update the rules of international trade to adapt to China's unique system of economic management. -- Back cover.
Contents:
Introduction / King Mallory and Howard J. Shatz
China's economic security : a key driver of competition with the United States / Timothy R. Heath
A stocktaking of economic measures targeting China / Alexandra Stark
Production network assurance : the economic realities of international integration and de-integration / Tobias Sytsma and Jessie Wang
Shaping elite networks : strategic cooperation with China / C. Ben Gibson, Aaron B. Frank, Khrystyna Holynska, and Jessie Wang
U.S.-China high-skilled return migration : implications for strategic economic competition / Nadia Almasalkhi
Energy and environmental security as drivers for U.S.-China economic cooperation and competition / Noosha Uddin
What Is a Chinese privately owned enterprise? Implications for the United States in a strategic competition / Steven W. Popper
A requiem for the global trade order? / King Mallory
Conclusion : seeking reward in a complex relationship / Daniel Egel and Howard J. Shatz.
Notes:
"Prepared for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency"
"RAND NATIONAL DEFENSE RESEARCH INSTITUTE"
Includes bibliographical references
ISBN:
9781977415066
1977415067
OCLC:
1525842568

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