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When Jonathan Watts was a small boy growing up in England he used to fret about what would happen to the world if everyone in China jumped at the same time.ย Many years on, heโs again worried that actions taken by that vast nationโs billion-plus people affect everyone else on this one planet of ours. When a Billion Chinese Jump joins a growing stack of weighty volumes on China. Many, like this one, are written by China-based western journalists who blend their professional eye for a good story with a huge sweep of big-picture statistics and sharp observation of whatโs happening on the ground. The Guardianโs Asia environment correspondent Jonathan Watts traces the tension between Chinaโs need to address its appalling environmental degradation while keeping its economic engine high-revving in top gear. Using a travelogue style, he criss-crosses the country from southwest to southeast, northwest to northeast. He probes manโs many ways to dominate, obliterate or mutate nature to our own ends. And he examines President Hu Jintaoโs โScientific Outlook on Developmentโ which stakes the countryโs future on design and technology.ย Is it possible, Watts asks, for China to overcome its environmental crisis before itโs too late for us all? As he says, โThe planetโs problems were not made in China, but they are sliding past the point of no return here.โ Watts flick-flacks the reader between complacency and despair. Just when I dared to hope an environmental catastrophe may be averted, he scared the bejesus out of me with another account of soil laced with toxic metals, of unbreathable air and untouchable rivers. โIt is unreasonable,โ he concludes, โto ask China to save the world, but the country forces mankind to recognise we are all going in the wrong direction.โ One small niggle: thereโs still a tendency among journalists to believe a big country like China must equate to a big book. Watts is no exception. When a Billion Chinese Jump runs to 392 pages including the afterword. Then thereโs another 91 pages of acknowledgements, notes, bibliography and index. Itโs all relevant, but Iโd got the point way before the ending. Having said that, if you want to get a grip on one of the most significant dramas playing out in the world right now, read this book. If you want to understand changing world dynamics and enjoyed Will Huttonโs The Writing on the Wall, James Kyngeโs China Shakes the World or Clyde Prestowitzโs Three Billion New Capitalists (which also includes India), read this book. If youโre an SME owner/manager looking for practical stuff to help you run your business, Iโm not sure our usual usefulness scale is the most appropriate one to apply. This bookโs value lies in its ability to deliver insights and press home a point. On that scale Iโd give it a 9 out of 10.
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