
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


For years, people have talked about China's ongoing process of opening up, or liberalizing its economy. And yet lately it's taken strong moves that seem to indicate a change in direction. It's cracked down on some of its largest tech companies while also allowing its real estate sector to cool off considerably, as we've seen with the stress on Evergrande. On this Odd Lots, we speak with UMass Amherst professor Isabella Weber, the author of the new book How China Escaped Shock Therapy: The Market Reform Debate. She explores China's big vision for making markets work in the pursuit of its ideas on socialism, and how the recent moves fit into a much broader, ongoing strategy.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By Bloomberg4.5
17661,766 ratings
For years, people have talked about China's ongoing process of opening up, or liberalizing its economy. And yet lately it's taken strong moves that seem to indicate a change in direction. It's cracked down on some of its largest tech companies while also allowing its real estate sector to cool off considerably, as we've seen with the stress on Evergrande. On this Odd Lots, we speak with UMass Amherst professor Isabella Weber, the author of the new book How China Escaped Shock Therapy: The Market Reform Debate. She explores China's big vision for making markets work in the pursuit of its ideas on socialism, and how the recent moves fit into a much broader, ongoing strategy.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

970 Listeners

3,075 Listeners

404 Listeners

1,170 Listeners

2,201 Listeners

420 Listeners

353 Listeners

948 Listeners

969 Listeners

797 Listeners

198 Listeners

294 Listeners

2,149 Listeners

30 Listeners

418 Listeners

5 Listeners

154 Listeners

58 Listeners

271 Listeners

233 Listeners

234 Listeners

63 Listeners

85 Listeners

76 Listeners

86 Listeners

403 Listeners

18 Listeners

12 Listeners

7 Listeners

2 Listeners

153 Listeners

114 Listeners