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"The New China Playbook: Beyond Socialism and Capitalism" SELECTED AS ONE OF THE Financial Times SUMMER READING
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"The New China Playbook: Beyond Socialism and Capitalism" SELECTED AS ONE OF THE Financial Times SUMMER READING

Born and raised in Beijing, Jin is a professor at the London School of Economics. This makes her one of a small handful of professional economists who understand China from the inside. In this book, she writes that what we are watching in Xi Jinping’s China is the emergence of a “new playbook”. This playbook represents a search for a “new equilibrium”, which “involves striking a balance between greater equality and market incentives, security and growth, self-reliance and continued engagement with the West”.

Read more at The Financial Times

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"The New China Playbook: Beyond Socialism and Capitalism" Selected as One of FORTUNE Magazine's Top 10 Must-Read Books for Board Members
Print, Commentary Keyu Jin Print, Commentary Keyu Jin

"The New China Playbook: Beyond Socialism and Capitalism" Selected as One of FORTUNE Magazine's Top 10 Must-Read Books for Board Members

"The New China Playbook: Beyond Socialism and Capitalism" makes it to Fortune magazine's must-read list for board members. This book offers a professional and in-depth analysis of China's unique economic development model, providing key insights for global business leaders. It serves as an essential guide to understanding international business trends.

Read more at FORTUNE

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Economist Keyu Jin on her new book, ‘The New China Playbook’

Economist Keyu Jin on her new book, ‘The New China Playbook’

This week on Sinica, Kaiser is joined by Keyu Jin, associate professor of economics at LSE, who talks about her new book, The New China Playbook: Beyond Socialism and Capitalism, a wide-ranging, ambitious, and accessible book that explains the unique Chinese political economy, emphasizing both its successes to date and how it must change to meet the challenges to come.

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Economist Keyu Jin on what America gets wrong about China

Economist Keyu Jin on what America gets wrong about China

In “The New China Playbook: Beyond Socialism and Capitalism,” economist Keyu Jin challenges what she says are popular myths about the country’s economic growth and model. Jin joins Washington Post global economics correspondent David J. Lynch for a conversation about China’s rise and its political future as a new generation comes of age.

Click here to listen to the PodCast on Washington Post Live

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Understanding China - Face to Face with Economist Keyu Jin

Understanding China - Face to Face with Economist Keyu Jin

The relationship between the world's two largest economies, the US and China, has rarely been more tense. China's new Ambassador in Washington Xie Feng has admitted this is a time of "serious difficulties and challenges", but insists he wants to put relations between the two nations back on track. And one person who may have some insight into how to do that is Economist and Author Keyu Jin - whose latest book is "The New China Playbook – Beyond Socialism and Capitalism".

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China’s next generation
Interviews, Media Appearances Keyu Jin Interviews, Media Appearances Keyu Jin

China’s next generation

Beijing leadership faces tough challenges to satisfy the ambitions of its youth. Beijing leadership faces tough challenges to satisfy the ambitions of its youth

Keyu Jin, associate professor of economics at the London School of Economics and author of a just-published book, The New China Playbook: Beyond Socialism and Capitalism. This podcast is a co-production with Intelligence Squared, who’ll be running a slightly longer version of our conversation. At a time when some are talking about Peak China and arguing that the glory days of the Chinese economy are over, Keyu has a more optimistic take.

See more at The Financial Times, listen to the audio here.

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The U.S. Tech Industry Needs China
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The U.S. Tech Industry Needs China

The U.S. economy of the 1970s was, in certain ways, quite similar to the U.S. economy today: rising inflation, a population broadly pessimistic about the future of the market, and persistent declines in overall productivity. There was also, back then, a growing economic threat from across the Pacific. Only, in the 1970s, the threat came from Japan, which was the subject of dozens of books, and even a handful of movies, as fears of it overtaking the U.S. as the world’s economic superpower loomed large.

Read more at TIME Magazine

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