Skip to Navigation
CSIS
50 years Charting Our Future
  • Log On
  • Create Account
  • Contact Us
  • Topics
  • Regions
  • Programs
  • Experts
  • Multimedia
  • Publications
  • Events
  • Press
  • Flashpoints
  • About Us
  • Support CSIS
Feb 13, 2012
Home / Publications
/ Partners and Competitors: Coming to Terms with U.S. - China Economic Relationship
Printer-friendly version
 

Partners and Competitors: Coming to Terms with U.S. - China Economic Relationship

  • Overview
  • Events

Publications on:

  • Defense and Security
  • Economic Development and Reconstruction
  • Energy and Climate Change
  • Global Health
  • Global Trends and Forecasting
  • Governance
  • Human Rights
  • Technology
  • Trade and Economics
  • Africa
  • Americas
  • East Asia and the Pacific
  • Europe
  • Middle East
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • South Asia

  

Partners and Competitors: Coming to Terms with U.S. - China Economic Relationship

  • By Bates Gill and Sue Anne Tay
    Apr 1, 2004

    Bates Gill and Sue Anne Tay argue that China is both a partner and a competitor, and that simplistic efforts to portray the US-China relationship as only one of the two are insufficient for the development of effective policy.

    Publisher CSIS
    Programs
    Freeman Chair in China Studies
    Topics
    Trade and Economics
    Regions
    East Asia and the Pacific
application/pdf icon
Partners and Competitors: Coming to Terms with U.S. - China Economic Relationship
application/pdf icon
Partners and Competitors: Coming to Terms with U.S. - China Economic Relationship

Events

  • Partners or Competitors? : Economics, Trade, and Finance in U.S.-China Relations
    Jan 13, 2004
    Trade and Economics
    East Asia and the Pacific, China
CSIS Center for Strategic and International Studies
1800 K Street, NW
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: 202-887-0200     Fax: 202-775-3199
All content © copyright 2012 All rights reserved.
Social Networks
Most Viewed
iTunes U
RSS Feeds
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Credits
  • Alumni