Grzegorz W. Kolodko is Professor of Economics at Kozminski University in Warsaw, and founder and Director of the TIGER Institute of Economic Affairs. He is a former Deputy Prime Minister of Poland and Minister of Finance, where he was a key architect of the economic reforms that brought Poland into the OECD in the 1990s. He is the author of Whither the World: The Political Economy of the Future (Palgrave, 2014) and of Truth, Errors and Lies: Economics and Politics in a Volatile World (Columbia University Press, 2011). He has written widely for international media and his books have been translated into 16 different languages.
A thought-provoking book on the consequences of the rise of China for the world economy. A plethora of interesting questions are proposed and investigated. In terms of current economic development, China and Poland are the most interesting, and the book has much to say about them. Given this, China and the Future of Globalization: The Political Economy of China's Rise is a must-read for any student of development. * Professor Edward C. Prescott, Nobel Prize Laureate in Economic Sciences * A fine reflection on China's rise, offered with neither fear nor favor but in the pragmatic spirit that is Professor Kolodko's stock-in-trade. * James K. Galbraith, The University of Texas at Austin * Greg Kolodko analyzes in this insightful book the economic, political and social implications of China's rejuvenation... The book is essential reading on a subject of the highest importance in the early 21st century. -- Justin Yifu Lin, Dean, Institute of New Structural Economics, Peking University, Former Chief Economist, the World Bank Grzegorz Kolodko has written a concise, erudite, balanced and perceptive book on the global implications of China's unstoppable rise. We are moving, inescapably, into a multi-polar and multi-cultural world. We must embrace this future. The notion of a new cold war with China is folly. Mutual respect and co-operation offer humanity its only tolerable future. * Martin Wolf, Associate Editor and Chief Economics Commentator, Financial Times *