
By All Means Necessary: How China's Resource Quest is Changing the World
About this book
In the past thirty years, China has transformed from an impoverished country where peasants comprised the largest portion of the populace to an economic power with an expanding middle class and more megacities than anywhere else on earth. This remarkable transformation has required, and will continue to demand, massive quantities of resources. Like every other major power in modern history, China is looking outward to find them.In By All Means Necessary , Elizabeth C. Economy and Michael Levi explore the unrivaled expansion of the Chinese economy and the global effects of its meteoric growth. China is now engaged in a far-flung quest, hunting around the world for fuel, ores, water, and land for farming, and deploying whatever it needs in the economic, political, and military spheres to secure the resources it requires. Chinese traders and investors buy commodities, with consequences for economies, people, and the environment around the world. Meanwhile the Chinese military aspires to secure sea lanes, and Chinese diplomats struggle to protect the country's interests abroad. And just as surely as China's pursuit of natural resources is changing the world--restructuring markets, pushing up commodity prices, transforming resource-rich economies through investment and trade--it is also changing China itself. As Chinese corporations increasingly venture abroad, they must navigate various political regimes,participate in international markets, and adopt foreign standards and practices, which can lead to wide-reaching social and political ramifications at home.Clear, authoritative, and provocative, By All Means Necessary is a sweeping account of where China's pursuit of raw materials may take the country in the coming years and what the consequences will be--not just for China, but for the whole world.
Where to buy
No purchase options available at this time.
More by Elizabeth C. Economy

The New Makers of Modern Strategy: From the Ancient World to the Digital Age
Margaret MacMillan, Michael Cotey Morgan, John Bew, Sergey Radchenko, Iskander Rehman, Hew Strachan, Daniel Marston, Robert Kagan, Brendan Simms, John Lewis Gaddis, Elizabeth C. Economy, Ahmed S. Hashim, Williamson Murray, Walter Russell Mead, S.C.M. Paine, Seth G. Jones, Mark Moyar, Thomas G. Mahnken, Lawrence Freedman, Toshi Yoshihara, Jonathan Kirshner, Carter Malkasian, Michael V. Leggiere, John H. Maurer, Eric Helleiner, Priya Satia, Hal Brands, Francis Gavin, Kori Schake, Wayne Wei-siang Hsieh, Thomas Rid, James Lacey, Matthew Kroenig, Joshua Rovner, Guy Laron, Tanvi Madan, Jason K. Stearns, Eric Edelman, Charles Edel, Dmitry Adamsky, Tami Biddle, Sue Mi Terry, Andrew Ehrhardt, Antulio Echevarria II, Matt J. Schumann, Christopher J. Griffin

The River Runs Black: The Environmental Challenge To China's Future
Elizabeth C. Economy

The Third Revolution: Xi Jinping and the New Chinese State
Elizabeth C. Economy

The World According to China
Elizabeth C. Economy