The Industrial Processes of Large Economies: The Quartet of US, China, Germany and Japan
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1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
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Singapore
Springer Singapore Pte. Limited
2022
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | HWR01 |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (190 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9789811686344 |
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505 | 8 | |a Intro -- Introduction -- Contents -- About the Author -- 1 The Integrated State of Global Production Chain -- 1.1 China's Top-Down Macro Engines -- 1.2 Bottom-Up Allocation by Export and Auto Production -- 1.3 The German-Sino Auto Linkage -- 1.4 The Sino Japan US Production Linkage -- 1.5 The Global Electronics Supply Chain and the IT Revolution -- 1.6 The Aerospace Supply Chain -- 2 Bismarck and the German Model of Consensus -- 2.1 Business, Labor and Governmental Mitigation -- 2.2 Research, Training and Limited Fiscal Support -- 2.3 Bank Lending and Long-Term Industrial Objectives -- 2.4 Stable Currency and Segmented Euro Fiscal Leverage -- 2.5 The German Search for a Stable Scaled Export Market -- 3 The Meiji Restoration and Value-Added Industrial Focus -- 3.1 Postwar Industrial Objectives and 5-Year Plans -- 3.2 Industrial Initiatives and Semiconductor Agreement -- 3.3 Trade Conflict and Interest Rate Liberalization -- 3.4 Currency Rate and the Plaza Accord -- 3.5 Aging Society and Fiscal Conservation -- 3.6 Sino-Japan-US Labor Division -- 4 The New Rome and the US Exceptionalism -- 4.1 Trade Industrial Policies in History -- 4.2 Fiscal Industrial Policy and Functional Focus -- 4.3 Direct Versus Indirect Specific Industrial Policy -- 4.4 Dollar Status, Yield Comparison and Industrial Allocation -- 4.5 The Global Deployment Model and Innovation Leverage -- 5 The Current Entrenched Global Imbalance -- 5.1 German Industrial Congregation Versus the Rest of Europe -- 5.2 Japanese Industrial Congregation by Industries and Regions -- 5.3 China Supply Chain Congregation and the Rise of Tier-1 Cities -- 5.4 US Tech International Success and Domestic Regional Divergence -- 5.5 The Capital Efficiency Model and the Social Divergence of the 1% -- 5.6 Industrial Policy Stability and Corporate Bias -- 5.7 Russia, UK and France | |
505 | 8 | |a 6 The Balancing Acts by the Large Industrial Economies -- 6.1 Broad Trade Tariff Increase and Corporate Tax Reduction -- 6.2 Industry-Specific Foreign Capital, Technology Restrictions -- 6.3 Home Market Development and Competitiveness -- 6.4 Home R& -- D and Industry Competitiveness -- 6.5 Home Labor Competitiveness and Social Safety -- 6.6 Industrial Globalization Dependency Diversification -- 7 The Current Macro Economic Structure of China -- 7.1 Successive 5-Year Plans and Changing Priorities -- 7.2 Macro Management Model-National Budgetary Expenditure -- 7.3 Macro Management Model-Policy Banks -- 7.4 Macro Management Model-PBOC and Financial Institutions -- 7.5 Macro Management Model-Corporates and Consumers -- 8 The Need and Path of Governance Modernization -- 8.1 The History of Geographical and Developmental Balance -- 8.2 The Key Governance-Building Events in China History -- 8.3 The Necessity of Gradual but Persistent Governance Reform -- 8.4 Current Value System and Government System -- 8.5 Past Market-Oriented Executive Branch Reform -- 9 Key Task Items for Governance Modernization -- 9.1 Mandate, Institute, Position, Task Realignment for Efficient Governance -- 9.2 Anti-corruption System for Effective Governance -- 9.3 Budgetary Reforms and Regional, Industrial Rebalance -- 9.4 Tax Reform, Real Estate and Fiscal Rebalance -- 9.5 Real Estate, Educational Reform and Wealth Rebalance -- 9.6 The Private Industries and Financial Reforms -- 9.7 Foreign Enterprises, Negative List Reform and Trade Agreements -- 10 The Future of Supply Chain Redistribution -- 10.1 The Decoupling Decision Process -- 10.2 German Japan US Auto Congregation in China -- 10.3 Sino-US Electronic Bifurcating Development -- 10.4 Maturing Manufacturing with China Plus One -- 10.5 Less Affected Medicine, Wintel, Aerospace, and Agricultural Industries | |
505 | 8 | |a 11 The Future of USD and the Global Capital Markets -- 11.1 Current Account, Oil and Electronics Supply Chain -- 11.2 Capital Accounts and Monetary Liquidity Synchronization -- 11.3 Value Preservation and Global Capital Markets -- 11.4 USD Risk Factors and Alternative Assessment -- 12 Potential Disruptive Industrial Development -- 12.1 Quantum Computing and the Control of the Global Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.2 Cloud Computing and the Rebalancing Within the Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.3 Chip Commoditization and the Redistribution Within the Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.4 Vehicles Electrification and Automotive Ecosystem Transformation -- 12.5 Self-driving Vehicles, Drones and Logistics Ecosystem Transformation -- 12.6 Clean Energy and Commodity Dollar Uncertainty -- 12.7 Gene, Human Brain Interaction and Emergence of New Bio-ecosystem -- 13 Uncertain Macro Development -- 13.1 Potential Macro Events from the US -- 13.2 Potential Macro Events from China -- 13.3 Potential Disruption in Sino-Europe-Japan Economic Integration -- 13.4 Potential Macro Development in Energy Source Countries -- 13.5 The Global Governance Model Feasibility -- 14 Specific End Notes | |
650 | 4 | |a Industrialization-United States-History | |
650 | 4 | |a Industrialization-China-History | |
650 | 4 | |a Industrialization-Germany-History | |
776 | 0 | 8 | |i Erscheint auch als |n Druck-Ausgabe |a Zhang, Xiaojiang |t The Industrial Processes of Large Economies |d Singapore : Springer Singapore Pte. Limited,c2022 |z 9789811686337 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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author | Zhang, Xiaojiang |
author_facet | Zhang, Xiaojiang |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Zhang, Xiaojiang |
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bvnumber | BV048830789 |
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contents | Intro -- Introduction -- Contents -- About the Author -- 1 The Integrated State of Global Production Chain -- 1.1 China's Top-Down Macro Engines -- 1.2 Bottom-Up Allocation by Export and Auto Production -- 1.3 The German-Sino Auto Linkage -- 1.4 The Sino Japan US Production Linkage -- 1.5 The Global Electronics Supply Chain and the IT Revolution -- 1.6 The Aerospace Supply Chain -- 2 Bismarck and the German Model of Consensus -- 2.1 Business, Labor and Governmental Mitigation -- 2.2 Research, Training and Limited Fiscal Support -- 2.3 Bank Lending and Long-Term Industrial Objectives -- 2.4 Stable Currency and Segmented Euro Fiscal Leverage -- 2.5 The German Search for a Stable Scaled Export Market -- 3 The Meiji Restoration and Value-Added Industrial Focus -- 3.1 Postwar Industrial Objectives and 5-Year Plans -- 3.2 Industrial Initiatives and Semiconductor Agreement -- 3.3 Trade Conflict and Interest Rate Liberalization -- 3.4 Currency Rate and the Plaza Accord -- 3.5 Aging Society and Fiscal Conservation -- 3.6 Sino-Japan-US Labor Division -- 4 The New Rome and the US Exceptionalism -- 4.1 Trade Industrial Policies in History -- 4.2 Fiscal Industrial Policy and Functional Focus -- 4.3 Direct Versus Indirect Specific Industrial Policy -- 4.4 Dollar Status, Yield Comparison and Industrial Allocation -- 4.5 The Global Deployment Model and Innovation Leverage -- 5 The Current Entrenched Global Imbalance -- 5.1 German Industrial Congregation Versus the Rest of Europe -- 5.2 Japanese Industrial Congregation by Industries and Regions -- 5.3 China Supply Chain Congregation and the Rise of Tier-1 Cities -- 5.4 US Tech International Success and Domestic Regional Divergence -- 5.5 The Capital Efficiency Model and the Social Divergence of the 1% -- 5.6 Industrial Policy Stability and Corporate Bias -- 5.7 Russia, UK and France 6 The Balancing Acts by the Large Industrial Economies -- 6.1 Broad Trade Tariff Increase and Corporate Tax Reduction -- 6.2 Industry-Specific Foreign Capital, Technology Restrictions -- 6.3 Home Market Development and Competitiveness -- 6.4 Home R& -- D and Industry Competitiveness -- 6.5 Home Labor Competitiveness and Social Safety -- 6.6 Industrial Globalization Dependency Diversification -- 7 The Current Macro Economic Structure of China -- 7.1 Successive 5-Year Plans and Changing Priorities -- 7.2 Macro Management Model-National Budgetary Expenditure -- 7.3 Macro Management Model-Policy Banks -- 7.4 Macro Management Model-PBOC and Financial Institutions -- 7.5 Macro Management Model-Corporates and Consumers -- 8 The Need and Path of Governance Modernization -- 8.1 The History of Geographical and Developmental Balance -- 8.2 The Key Governance-Building Events in China History -- 8.3 The Necessity of Gradual but Persistent Governance Reform -- 8.4 Current Value System and Government System -- 8.5 Past Market-Oriented Executive Branch Reform -- 9 Key Task Items for Governance Modernization -- 9.1 Mandate, Institute, Position, Task Realignment for Efficient Governance -- 9.2 Anti-corruption System for Effective Governance -- 9.3 Budgetary Reforms and Regional, Industrial Rebalance -- 9.4 Tax Reform, Real Estate and Fiscal Rebalance -- 9.5 Real Estate, Educational Reform and Wealth Rebalance -- 9.6 The Private Industries and Financial Reforms -- 9.7 Foreign Enterprises, Negative List Reform and Trade Agreements -- 10 The Future of Supply Chain Redistribution -- 10.1 The Decoupling Decision Process -- 10.2 German Japan US Auto Congregation in China -- 10.3 Sino-US Electronic Bifurcating Development -- 10.4 Maturing Manufacturing with China Plus One -- 10.5 Less Affected Medicine, Wintel, Aerospace, and Agricultural Industries 11 The Future of USD and the Global Capital Markets -- 11.1 Current Account, Oil and Electronics Supply Chain -- 11.2 Capital Accounts and Monetary Liquidity Synchronization -- 11.3 Value Preservation and Global Capital Markets -- 11.4 USD Risk Factors and Alternative Assessment -- 12 Potential Disruptive Industrial Development -- 12.1 Quantum Computing and the Control of the Global Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.2 Cloud Computing and the Rebalancing Within the Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.3 Chip Commoditization and the Redistribution Within the Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.4 Vehicles Electrification and Automotive Ecosystem Transformation -- 12.5 Self-driving Vehicles, Drones and Logistics Ecosystem Transformation -- 12.6 Clean Energy and Commodity Dollar Uncertainty -- 12.7 Gene, Human Brain Interaction and Emergence of New Bio-ecosystem -- 13 Uncertain Macro Development -- 13.1 Potential Macro Events from the US -- 13.2 Potential Macro Events from China -- 13.3 Potential Disruption in Sino-Europe-Japan Economic Integration -- 13.4 Potential Macro Development in Energy Source Countries -- 13.5 The Global Governance Model Feasibility -- 14 Specific End Notes |
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discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
discipline_str_mv | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
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spelling | Zhang, Xiaojiang Verfasser aut The Industrial Processes of Large Economies The Quartet of US, China, Germany and Japan Singapore Springer Singapore Pte. Limited 2022 ©2022 1 Online-Ressource (190 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Intro -- Introduction -- Contents -- About the Author -- 1 The Integrated State of Global Production Chain -- 1.1 China's Top-Down Macro Engines -- 1.2 Bottom-Up Allocation by Export and Auto Production -- 1.3 The German-Sino Auto Linkage -- 1.4 The Sino Japan US Production Linkage -- 1.5 The Global Electronics Supply Chain and the IT Revolution -- 1.6 The Aerospace Supply Chain -- 2 Bismarck and the German Model of Consensus -- 2.1 Business, Labor and Governmental Mitigation -- 2.2 Research, Training and Limited Fiscal Support -- 2.3 Bank Lending and Long-Term Industrial Objectives -- 2.4 Stable Currency and Segmented Euro Fiscal Leverage -- 2.5 The German Search for a Stable Scaled Export Market -- 3 The Meiji Restoration and Value-Added Industrial Focus -- 3.1 Postwar Industrial Objectives and 5-Year Plans -- 3.2 Industrial Initiatives and Semiconductor Agreement -- 3.3 Trade Conflict and Interest Rate Liberalization -- 3.4 Currency Rate and the Plaza Accord -- 3.5 Aging Society and Fiscal Conservation -- 3.6 Sino-Japan-US Labor Division -- 4 The New Rome and the US Exceptionalism -- 4.1 Trade Industrial Policies in History -- 4.2 Fiscal Industrial Policy and Functional Focus -- 4.3 Direct Versus Indirect Specific Industrial Policy -- 4.4 Dollar Status, Yield Comparison and Industrial Allocation -- 4.5 The Global Deployment Model and Innovation Leverage -- 5 The Current Entrenched Global Imbalance -- 5.1 German Industrial Congregation Versus the Rest of Europe -- 5.2 Japanese Industrial Congregation by Industries and Regions -- 5.3 China Supply Chain Congregation and the Rise of Tier-1 Cities -- 5.4 US Tech International Success and Domestic Regional Divergence -- 5.5 The Capital Efficiency Model and the Social Divergence of the 1% -- 5.6 Industrial Policy Stability and Corporate Bias -- 5.7 Russia, UK and France 6 The Balancing Acts by the Large Industrial Economies -- 6.1 Broad Trade Tariff Increase and Corporate Tax Reduction -- 6.2 Industry-Specific Foreign Capital, Technology Restrictions -- 6.3 Home Market Development and Competitiveness -- 6.4 Home R& -- D and Industry Competitiveness -- 6.5 Home Labor Competitiveness and Social Safety -- 6.6 Industrial Globalization Dependency Diversification -- 7 The Current Macro Economic Structure of China -- 7.1 Successive 5-Year Plans and Changing Priorities -- 7.2 Macro Management Model-National Budgetary Expenditure -- 7.3 Macro Management Model-Policy Banks -- 7.4 Macro Management Model-PBOC and Financial Institutions -- 7.5 Macro Management Model-Corporates and Consumers -- 8 The Need and Path of Governance Modernization -- 8.1 The History of Geographical and Developmental Balance -- 8.2 The Key Governance-Building Events in China History -- 8.3 The Necessity of Gradual but Persistent Governance Reform -- 8.4 Current Value System and Government System -- 8.5 Past Market-Oriented Executive Branch Reform -- 9 Key Task Items for Governance Modernization -- 9.1 Mandate, Institute, Position, Task Realignment for Efficient Governance -- 9.2 Anti-corruption System for Effective Governance -- 9.3 Budgetary Reforms and Regional, Industrial Rebalance -- 9.4 Tax Reform, Real Estate and Fiscal Rebalance -- 9.5 Real Estate, Educational Reform and Wealth Rebalance -- 9.6 The Private Industries and Financial Reforms -- 9.7 Foreign Enterprises, Negative List Reform and Trade Agreements -- 10 The Future of Supply Chain Redistribution -- 10.1 The Decoupling Decision Process -- 10.2 German Japan US Auto Congregation in China -- 10.3 Sino-US Electronic Bifurcating Development -- 10.4 Maturing Manufacturing with China Plus One -- 10.5 Less Affected Medicine, Wintel, Aerospace, and Agricultural Industries 11 The Future of USD and the Global Capital Markets -- 11.1 Current Account, Oil and Electronics Supply Chain -- 11.2 Capital Accounts and Monetary Liquidity Synchronization -- 11.3 Value Preservation and Global Capital Markets -- 11.4 USD Risk Factors and Alternative Assessment -- 12 Potential Disruptive Industrial Development -- 12.1 Quantum Computing and the Control of the Global Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.2 Cloud Computing and the Rebalancing Within the Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.3 Chip Commoditization and the Redistribution Within the Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.4 Vehicles Electrification and Automotive Ecosystem Transformation -- 12.5 Self-driving Vehicles, Drones and Logistics Ecosystem Transformation -- 12.6 Clean Energy and Commodity Dollar Uncertainty -- 12.7 Gene, Human Brain Interaction and Emergence of New Bio-ecosystem -- 13 Uncertain Macro Development -- 13.1 Potential Macro Events from the US -- 13.2 Potential Macro Events from China -- 13.3 Potential Disruption in Sino-Europe-Japan Economic Integration -- 13.4 Potential Macro Development in Energy Source Countries -- 13.5 The Global Governance Model Feasibility -- 14 Specific End Notes Industrialization-United States-History Industrialization-China-History Industrialization-Germany-History Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Zhang, Xiaojiang The Industrial Processes of Large Economies Singapore : Springer Singapore Pte. Limited,c2022 9789811686337 |
spellingShingle | Zhang, Xiaojiang The Industrial Processes of Large Economies The Quartet of US, China, Germany and Japan Intro -- Introduction -- Contents -- About the Author -- 1 The Integrated State of Global Production Chain -- 1.1 China's Top-Down Macro Engines -- 1.2 Bottom-Up Allocation by Export and Auto Production -- 1.3 The German-Sino Auto Linkage -- 1.4 The Sino Japan US Production Linkage -- 1.5 The Global Electronics Supply Chain and the IT Revolution -- 1.6 The Aerospace Supply Chain -- 2 Bismarck and the German Model of Consensus -- 2.1 Business, Labor and Governmental Mitigation -- 2.2 Research, Training and Limited Fiscal Support -- 2.3 Bank Lending and Long-Term Industrial Objectives -- 2.4 Stable Currency and Segmented Euro Fiscal Leverage -- 2.5 The German Search for a Stable Scaled Export Market -- 3 The Meiji Restoration and Value-Added Industrial Focus -- 3.1 Postwar Industrial Objectives and 5-Year Plans -- 3.2 Industrial Initiatives and Semiconductor Agreement -- 3.3 Trade Conflict and Interest Rate Liberalization -- 3.4 Currency Rate and the Plaza Accord -- 3.5 Aging Society and Fiscal Conservation -- 3.6 Sino-Japan-US Labor Division -- 4 The New Rome and the US Exceptionalism -- 4.1 Trade Industrial Policies in History -- 4.2 Fiscal Industrial Policy and Functional Focus -- 4.3 Direct Versus Indirect Specific Industrial Policy -- 4.4 Dollar Status, Yield Comparison and Industrial Allocation -- 4.5 The Global Deployment Model and Innovation Leverage -- 5 The Current Entrenched Global Imbalance -- 5.1 German Industrial Congregation Versus the Rest of Europe -- 5.2 Japanese Industrial Congregation by Industries and Regions -- 5.3 China Supply Chain Congregation and the Rise of Tier-1 Cities -- 5.4 US Tech International Success and Domestic Regional Divergence -- 5.5 The Capital Efficiency Model and the Social Divergence of the 1% -- 5.6 Industrial Policy Stability and Corporate Bias -- 5.7 Russia, UK and France 6 The Balancing Acts by the Large Industrial Economies -- 6.1 Broad Trade Tariff Increase and Corporate Tax Reduction -- 6.2 Industry-Specific Foreign Capital, Technology Restrictions -- 6.3 Home Market Development and Competitiveness -- 6.4 Home R& -- D and Industry Competitiveness -- 6.5 Home Labor Competitiveness and Social Safety -- 6.6 Industrial Globalization Dependency Diversification -- 7 The Current Macro Economic Structure of China -- 7.1 Successive 5-Year Plans and Changing Priorities -- 7.2 Macro Management Model-National Budgetary Expenditure -- 7.3 Macro Management Model-Policy Banks -- 7.4 Macro Management Model-PBOC and Financial Institutions -- 7.5 Macro Management Model-Corporates and Consumers -- 8 The Need and Path of Governance Modernization -- 8.1 The History of Geographical and Developmental Balance -- 8.2 The Key Governance-Building Events in China History -- 8.3 The Necessity of Gradual but Persistent Governance Reform -- 8.4 Current Value System and Government System -- 8.5 Past Market-Oriented Executive Branch Reform -- 9 Key Task Items for Governance Modernization -- 9.1 Mandate, Institute, Position, Task Realignment for Efficient Governance -- 9.2 Anti-corruption System for Effective Governance -- 9.3 Budgetary Reforms and Regional, Industrial Rebalance -- 9.4 Tax Reform, Real Estate and Fiscal Rebalance -- 9.5 Real Estate, Educational Reform and Wealth Rebalance -- 9.6 The Private Industries and Financial Reforms -- 9.7 Foreign Enterprises, Negative List Reform and Trade Agreements -- 10 The Future of Supply Chain Redistribution -- 10.1 The Decoupling Decision Process -- 10.2 German Japan US Auto Congregation in China -- 10.3 Sino-US Electronic Bifurcating Development -- 10.4 Maturing Manufacturing with China Plus One -- 10.5 Less Affected Medicine, Wintel, Aerospace, and Agricultural Industries 11 The Future of USD and the Global Capital Markets -- 11.1 Current Account, Oil and Electronics Supply Chain -- 11.2 Capital Accounts and Monetary Liquidity Synchronization -- 11.3 Value Preservation and Global Capital Markets -- 11.4 USD Risk Factors and Alternative Assessment -- 12 Potential Disruptive Industrial Development -- 12.1 Quantum Computing and the Control of the Global Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.2 Cloud Computing and the Rebalancing Within the Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.3 Chip Commoditization and the Redistribution Within the Electronic Ecosystem -- 12.4 Vehicles Electrification and Automotive Ecosystem Transformation -- 12.5 Self-driving Vehicles, Drones and Logistics Ecosystem Transformation -- 12.6 Clean Energy and Commodity Dollar Uncertainty -- 12.7 Gene, Human Brain Interaction and Emergence of New Bio-ecosystem -- 13 Uncertain Macro Development -- 13.1 Potential Macro Events from the US -- 13.2 Potential Macro Events from China -- 13.3 Potential Disruption in Sino-Europe-Japan Economic Integration -- 13.4 Potential Macro Development in Energy Source Countries -- 13.5 The Global Governance Model Feasibility -- 14 Specific End Notes Industrialization-United States-History Industrialization-China-History Industrialization-Germany-History |
title | The Industrial Processes of Large Economies The Quartet of US, China, Germany and Japan |
title_auth | The Industrial Processes of Large Economies The Quartet of US, China, Germany and Japan |
title_exact_search | The Industrial Processes of Large Economies The Quartet of US, China, Germany and Japan |
title_exact_search_txtP | The Industrial Processes of Large Economies The Quartet of US, China, Germany and Japan |
title_full | The Industrial Processes of Large Economies The Quartet of US, China, Germany and Japan |
title_fullStr | The Industrial Processes of Large Economies The Quartet of US, China, Germany and Japan |
title_full_unstemmed | The Industrial Processes of Large Economies The Quartet of US, China, Germany and Japan |
title_short | The Industrial Processes of Large Economies |
title_sort | the industrial processes of large economies the quartet of us china germany and japan |
title_sub | The Quartet of US, China, Germany and Japan |
topic | Industrialization-United States-History Industrialization-China-History Industrialization-Germany-History |
topic_facet | Industrialization-United States-History Industrialization-China-History Industrialization-Germany-History |
work_keys_str_mv | AT zhangxiaojiang theindustrialprocessesoflargeeconomiesthequartetofuschinagermanyandjapan |