Audiobook6 hours
The Next Factory of the World: How Chinese Investment Is Reshaping Africa
Written by Irene Yuan Sun
Narrated by Nancy Wu
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5/5
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About this audiobook
Will Africa be the world's next hub of manufacturing? China is answering in the affirmative and investing accordingly. This book dispels the notion that this crucial story is merely about China's exploitation of Africa's resources, illuminating deep questions about our own, Western approach to development, and the implications for the future of manufacturing. China is now the biggest foreign player in Africa: largest trade partner, largest infrastructure financier, and fastest-growing source of foreign direct investment. Chinese entrepreneurs are flooding into Africa, investing in long-term assets, such as factories and heavy equipment. The fact that China sees Africa not for its poverty but for its potential wealth is a striking departure from the attitude of the West, in particular the United States. For fifty years the West has engaged in countless poverty-alleviation and development-aid programs in Africa, yet Africa still has the largest number of people living in extreme poverty of any region in the world. Considering Africa's difficult history of colonialism, one might suspect that the current story of China in Africa is merely a story about exploitation of resources. Author Irene Yuan Sun follows these entrepreneurs and finds, instead, that they are factory owners, building in Africa what they so recently learned to build in China-a global manufacturing powerhouse. This gives rise to a tantalizing possibility: that Africa can industrialize in the coming generation. With a manufacturing-led transformation, Africa would be following in the footsteps of the United States in the nineteenth century, Japan in the early twentieth, and the Asian Tigers in the late twentieth century. Many may consider this an old-fashioned way to develop, but it's the only one that's proven to raise living standards across entire societies for generations. And with every new Chinese factory boss setting up machinery and hiring African workers, that possibility becomes more real for Africa. With fascinating stories of entrepreneurs, workers, and government officials in Africa, along with incisive business and economic analysis, The Next Factory of the World will make you rethink both China's role in the world and Africa's future in the globalized economy.
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Reviews for The Next Factory of the World
Rating: 4.518518518518518 out of 5 stars
4.5/5
27 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5An optimistic-- but well-informed-- case for African Industrial take-off in the near future via Chinese entrepreneurs. The book doesn't focus on Chines State Owned Companies, or gov't cash infusions so much as those "flying geese" who follow the lowest labor costs for their factories. Many of these have relocated from China to Africa and are committed to build up their factories over the long haul, hiring Africans as they proceed. Emphasizing 4 or 5 countries, and describing her own first hand experience in visiting these start-ups, Sun believes African industrialization via Chinese entrepreneur is already underway. Though there will be challenges ahead, she argues coherently that the present moment gives a window of opportunity for this development (i.e. lower labor costs in Africa, great working age demographic there, Chinese entrepreneurs often see Africa as being at a similar stage in development to China 30 years ago, and have first hand experience in industrializing in context of a poor nation). For more on the role of gov't investments from China see Deborah Brautigam's Dragon's Gift (2009) and her many more recent articles and videos tracking changes and trends.