The Kunshan Way

0 CommentsPrint E-mail China.org.cn, March 28, 2011
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Paperback: 186 pages
Publisher: Foreign Languages Press; 1st edition (2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 7119064320
ISBN-13: 978-7119064321

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The I-Pod you Listen to was made in Kunshan; if you have a Cornpaq, Acer, Dell,Toshiba, HP or MSI aptop it was manufactured in Kunshan, almost 20 percent of the world's digital cameras are manufactured in Kunshan; more than 2 bihon dollars worth of bicycles and bicycle parts are manufactured there each year. If you are under 18, chances are you sat in a stroller and car seat designed and manufactured in Kunshan. Everyday something flora Kunshan touches you or someone you know,yet you have never heard of it.

In China, Kunshan is just one of over 100 cities with over a million people. Twenty years ago it was a collection of rural towns and villages organized as a township; today it is the No.1 county-level city by GDP in China. How this meteoric transformation occurred is due to two factors, its proximity to Shanghai and the collection of innovative approaches and methods which make up the Kunshan Way. By reading this book, you will hear Kunshan's story from the government and business leaders who have created it and the people who live there. You will have a better idea of how China uses its central planning/local implementation approach to drive its economy and how Chinese cities are organized. Just as importantly, you will learn about what lies beyond the numbers, what is unique about Kunshan, where the roots of its success came from and what it has to offer.

About the Author

Hr. Einar Tangen is an American citizen, of half decent, who split his younger years between the US and England. After attending undergraduate and law school, he practiced for five years and then founded E-TECH, which provides financial control and project management services for large infrastructure projects. His work on these projects led to an interest in urban development and finance. Hr. Tangen's past work includes: Republic of Korea, FDI Advisor; Wisconsin International Trade Council, Chair; Milwaukee Business Improvement District, No. 2, Chair; Milwaukee Board of Zoning Appeals, Chair; Milwaukee Debt Commission, Chair; Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago CIC, Board and Stife Nicolaus & Co., Milwaukee 0ffice,First Vice-President Structured Finance. In 1999 he visited China as a guest of the government, which eventually led to him moving to Beijing in 2006. In China, he advises Heilongjiang Province, Hebei Province's ETDZ and a number of private clients on foreign technology strategy and acquisitions. He also writes a biweekly business article on China for American business magazine "Biz Times".

Excerpts
Preface
Chapter 1: China and the Kunshan Way
Chapter 2: What Kunshan Has to Offer
Kunshan's Forefathers
Culture
Water Towns
The Treasures of Tinglin Park
Food
Entertainment

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