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4 - Learning the Right Lessons from Beijing: A Model for the Arab World?

from PART TWO - THE CHINESE MODEL AND ITS COMPETITORS IN THE MUSLIM WORLD

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2015

Robert Springborg
Affiliation:
Department of National Security Affairs, Naval Postgraduate School
Emma Murphy
Affiliation:
University of Durham
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

It should not be surprising if Joshua Ramo's “new physics of development and power” hold tremendous appeal for Arab regime elites. Ramo talks of the “electric power” of the Chinese example – its demonstration of an alternative path to development which challenges not only the US-led Washington Consensus for economic liberalism laced with political democratisation, but also offers the potential to translate an economic transformation into global power projection to rival that of America itself. For the authoritarian Arab regimes, with their lack-lustre exercises in structural adjustment, patchy records of economic growth, fragile human development performance and post-colonial resentments at external interventions in regional affairs, what could be more attractive than the so-called Beijing Consensus? As Ramo himself says:

China is marking a path for other nations around the world who are trying to figure out not simply how to develop their countries, but also how to fit into the international order in a way that allows them to be truly independent, to protect their way of life and political choices in a world with a single massively powerful centre of gravity.

For countries aspiring to comparable development, China's model has become far more than the go-global trade strategy of the 1990s. After all, adherents of the Washington Consensus have been pushing that themselves for decades. The appeal lies instead in the understanding of development as something more than unquestioning engagement with, and submission to, the dictums of global capitalism.

Type
Chapter
Information
Development Models in Muslim Contexts
Chinese, 'Islamic' and Neo-Liberal Alternatives
, pp. 85 - 114
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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