Book review: Debating China, edited by Nina Hachigian
China and the United States have the single most important bilateral relationship in the world, so it is worrying that the two countries appear to spend a great deal of time talking at cross purposes.
China and the United States have the single most important bilateral relationship in the world, so it is worrying that the two countries appear to spend a great deal of time talking at cross purposes.
On the subject of the Diaoyu Islands, for example, China demands territorial integrity; the US demands a peaceful and secure Pacific. The US raises the issue of human rights; China notes the importance of political stability.
Recognising this disconnect, Nina Hachigian, a senior fellow at the Centre for American Progress, has brought together leading thinkers from both sides of the US-China divide in an effort to kick-start a dialogue on a relationship that is "more important to the future of humanity" than any other.
Debating China takes a rather novel approach to the issue, pairing 10 American academics and experts with 10 Chinese counterparts. The reader is then presented with the resulting correspondence.
Beyond the introductory pleasantries, none of the participants pull their punches: "I do not think it is fair to blame China for manipulating the exchange rate," argues Yao Yang in an exchange on economics with Barry Naughton, "while failing to mention the Federal Reserve … is doing the same."
