How China Escaped Shock Therapy
Routledge Studies on the Chinese Economy
by Isabella M. Weber
Narrated by Susan Ericksen
Why You'll Love This
Weber's economic history reads like a political saga: the ideological wars between China's reformers that proved gradualism, not shock therapy, changed everything.
About This Book
Isabella M. Weber's scholarly investigation reframes one of the most consequential economic decisions of the twentieth century: how China chose gradualism over the radical market dismantling that devastated post-Soviet economies. Drawing on previously unpublished documents and interviews with key participants, Weber reconstructs the fierce internal debate among Chinese reformers in the 1980s, when competing visions of marketization collided. The book argues that China's remarkable economic rise was not inevitable but the product of deliberate, contested choices about how to use existing socialist institutions rather than discard them.
Susan Ericksen brings measured authority to the material, navigating dense policy analysis and historical narrative with clarity that keeps complex economic theory accessible. Her pacing suits the book's academic rigor without sacrificing momentum, and her even tone gives weight to the high-stakes disagreements at the center of the story. At just over sixteen hours, the runtime rewards patient listeners who want a serious, evidence-driven account of how China charted its own path.
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