c**i 发帖数: 6973 | 1 Vikas Bajaj, A One-Sided Rivalry; India looks to China, but China doesn't
notice. New York Times, Sept 1, 2011.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/01/business/global
/india-looks-to-china-as-an-economic-model.html?_r=1&ref=vikasbajaj
("Whatever the reasons, Indians compare virtually every aspect of their
nation with China")
Excerpt in the window of print: A vibrant but messy democracy admires a
rival's discipline.
My comment:
(a) It is unrequited love.
(b) Qingdao
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qingdao
(The world's longest sea bridge, the Qingdao Haiwan Bridge, links the main
urban area of Qingdao with Huangdao district, straddling the Jiaozhou Bay
sea areas)
For Huangdao District 黄岛区, see section 3 3 Administrative divisions.
(c) Raghav Bahl, Superpower? The amazing race between China's hare and
India's tortoise. Penguin Books India, 2010.
---------------------------------Separately
Anil K Gupta and Haiyan Wang, How Beijing Is Stifling Chinese Innovation;
Multinationals are far more comfortable doing research in India. Wall Street
Journal, Sept 1, 2011.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405
3111904583204576542503379704870.html
Note:
(a) Haiyan WANG 王海燕, who used to be 解放日报 记者 and is the co-author
of
Anil K Gupta and Haiyan Wang, Getting China and India Right: Strategies for
leveraging the World's Fastest Growing Economies for Global Advantage 中国和
印度:利用全球优势实现经济增长最快的策略. Jossey-Bass (an imprint of Wiley),
2009.
(b) The quotation "a blueprint for technology theft on a scale the world has
not seen before" appeared in
James McGregor, China’s Drive for 'Indigenous Innovation' - A Web of
Industrial Policies. US Chamber of Commerce at Washington DC, July 2010, at
page 4.
http://www.uschamber.com/reports/chinas-drive-indigenous-innova
Mr McGregory is senior counselor, APCO Worldwide.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APCO_Worldwide
(With more than 600 employees in 29 worldwide locations, it is the second
largest independently-owned PR firm in the United States; Margery Kraus
founded APCO Associates [at DC] in 1984 as a subsidiary to Arnold & Porter,
one of Washington's largest law firms, and from where APCO’s name is
derived) |
|