Ann Lee, China, jw najarian, crepig, business, finance, commercial real estate
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Ann Lee, Senior Fellow at Demos Talks to Us About Opportunities and What the U.S. Can Learn From ChinaI have to commend and thank Professor Ann Lee.
I double booked our appointment confusing PST and EST. My wife told me I would do this eventually.
I had my main phone line shut down so I had to do the interview on my cell phone while a Verizon tech fixed my main line and he wanted to give me progress reports all during this interview.
I know little about China compared to Ann so I had to edit out several very stupid questions.
All in all Ann was a trooper and stuck with me even though she had an appointment with CNN right after our call.
Ann please except my apologies for I know this was one of the rougher interviews you had to do this week. Also thank you for your brilliance and insight on these matters.
We are no longer headed towards becoming a global economy. We are well entrenched in it now.As a nation, we have to learn the truth about our world and other nations and open ourselves up to possibility.
We cannot, as a country, grow out of our current situation by coddling our uneducated, lack minded fear about the other guy.
Instead we must take the risk to lean into our fears and embrace all the world had to offer and teach us. - JW
She has been quoted in hundreds of publications and has been an invited speaker at numerous industry and academic conferences.
Ann is also an adjunct professor of economics and finance at New York University and a former visiting professor at Peking University where she taught macroeconomics and financial derivatives.
While she was teaching at Peking University, she also acted as an economic advisor to Chinese economic officials as well as to several large Chinese asset management firms.
She was educated at U.C. Berkeley, Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of International Affairs, and Harvard Business School.
She is currently a Senior Fellow at Demos, a multi-issue national organization that combines research, policy development and advocacy to influence public debate and catalyze change.
While America is still reeling from the 2008 financial crisis, a high unemployment rate, and a surge in government debt, China’s economy is the second largest in the world and many predict will surpass the U.S. by 2020. President Obama called China’s rise “a Sputnik moment”—will America seize this moment or continue to treat China as its scapegoat?
Mainstream media and the U.S.government regularly target China as a threat. Rather than viewing China’s power, influence, and contributions to the global economy in a negative light, Ann Lee asks:
From education to governance to foreign aid, Lee details the policies and practices that have made China a global power and then isolates the ways the U.S. can use China’s enduring principles to foster much-needed change at home.
This is no whitewash. Lee is fully aware of China’s shortcomings, particularly in the area of human rights, She has relatives who suffered during the Cultural Revolution. But by overemphasizing our differences with China, the U.S.stands to miss a vital opportunity.
Filled with sharp insights and thorough research, What the U.S. Can Learn from China is Lee’s rallying cry for a new approach at a time when learning from one another is the key to surviving and thriving.
Key points about the book:
A multi-issue national organization, Demos combines research, policy development and advocacy to influence public debate and catalyze change. Founded in 2000 and headquartered in New York City, Demos works with advocates and policymakers around the country in pursuit of three overarching goals:
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NOTE: In the interview I mention SME's and TVE's. For clarity I have here the meaning of the acronyms.
SME Small to Medium Sized Enterprise
TVE Township and Village Enterprise
Comment by KIraalire Joseph on March 19, 2012 at 6:39am It's a competitive world economically .here in Africa we are using more of Chine's products than U.S .
Arkansas Economic Development is courting the Chinese. The governor is visiting China very soon for some on site communicating.
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© 2012 Created by JW Najarian.
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