One Road, Many Dreams
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One Belt, One Road is China's bold plan to remake the global
economy. It's an ambitious strategy with a $2 trillion - and rising
- budget. The objective? To challenge the existing economic and
political world order.One Road, Many Dreams reveals the true extent
of China's ambition, analyses the impact of the One Belt, One Road
initiative and assesses its chances of success and failure. This is
the Asian century and China has a plan - to remake the world
economy. Under its audacious One Belt, One Road strategy, China is
investing trillions of dollars in hundreds of projects all around
the globe.It's buying up ports, building transport networks and
constructing major infrastructure. From hydroelectric plants to oil
pipelines, China supplies the labour if needed, the raw materials
and the finance, creating customers and boosting its own economy in
the process. More than 80 nations have already joined China's
increasingly less exclusive club and by 2049, when One Belt, One
Road is set to end, its number of members is likely to rival the
UN.So far, China has exercised its soft power of debt diplomacy and
financial might shrewdly, serving the planet's overlooked
middle-income and poor countries. The rest of the world needs to
wake up because the scale of One Belt, One Road is unprecedented.
Its implications for the global structure of power are potentially
seismic as the geopolitical ties between Europe and Asia
deepen.Written by three highly regarded political economists, One
Road, Many Dreams examines the One Belt, One Road initiative from
all angles. It looks at the projects and the players, the alliances
and the governance. It explores the opportunities for China and the
threat to the West, particularly for Trump's isolationist US
administration.At home and abroad, China is staking its credibility
as a superpower on One Belt, One Road. Its resources appear
limitless, but One Road, Many Dreams asks a tough question: has
China overreached? Or can it really pull this off and remake the
world economy in its own interests?