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Title: U.S.-China High-Skilled Return Migration: Implications for Strategic Economic Competition
Citation Type: Book, Section
Publication Year: 2017
ISBN: 9781977415066
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Abstract: U.S.-China competition, including economic competition, has come to define U.S. foreign policy since 2017. The two economies are the first- and second-largest national economies in the world, and they are deeply intertwined in all aspects of international exchange. Any changes to the relationship, however necessary, could be costly. To respond to this challenge, RAND researchers conducted economic and institutional analyses of U.S.-China competition, engaged in a participatory foresight exercise to understand the long-term path for ensuring U.S. economic health, and created two economic competition games exploring the dynamics of multiple countries trying to ensure their economic health while interacting with each other and the private sector. This report, the first of a four-part series, includes the economic and institutional analyses of U.S.-China economic competition. The second report presents the results of a participatory foresight exercise designed to under- stand the path for ensuring long-term U.S. economic health. The third and fourth reports describe two economic competition games that explore the dynamics of multiple countries trying to ensure their economic health while interacting with each other and the private sector.
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Authors: Almasalkhi, Nadia
Editors: Howard J. Shatz, Editors, Daniel Egel
Pages: 147-
Volume Title: U.S.-China Economic Competition Gains and Risks in a Complex Economic and Geopolitical Relationship
Publisher: RAND
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Data Collections: IPUMS USA, IPUMS CPS
Topics: Poverty and Welfare
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