Will China's growing economy outstrip the economic power of
Japan and the advanced industrialized democracies of the West? No.
For China to continue its phenomenal growth and develop sustainable
comparative advantage, it needs to sustain a huge world market for
its products and the technological and organizational capacity for
innovation. According to Arayama and Mourdoukoutas, because China
cannot secure these economic conditions, its role in the world
economy will be limited to that of a mass producer of certain types
of products. China's strength is its low-cost, mass-production
capacity--but the lack of an ingrained capacity to innovate
constrains China to transforming foreign innovations into
lower-priced imitations. Arayama and Mourdoukoutas detail their
argument carefully and precisely, in a well-written analysis that
will be necessary reading for business decision makers and their
academic colleagues, and for others who are seriously interested in
the future of world business.
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