Ever since China and India began to reform their planned economies
in the 1980s, the world has watched as two quite differenct
development success stories have unfolded. One side has been
China's rapid economic growth and remarkable achievements in
poverty alleviation and diplomatic power. On the other has been
India's less rapid growth but continued success in democratic rule
and social pluralism. Today the two countries, which together
account for 40 percent of the global population, are emerging as
the new great powers of the twenty-first century. Contributors to
this volume reconsider the conventional wisdom that argues that the
comparative performance of China has been superior to that of
India, bring together new paradigms for evaluating the two
countries in terms of economics, social policy, politics, and
diplomacy. The essays show that if not outright wrong, conventional
wisdom has proven to be overly simplified.
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