Command of Commerce: America's Enduring Economic Power Advantage over China

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· Gildan Media · Narrated by Jonathan Strait
Audiobook
7 hr 13 min
Unabridged
Eligible
This book will become available on September 16, 2025. You will not be charged until it is released.

About this audiobook

The conventional wisdom has held that China's economic power is very close to America's and that Washington cannot undertake a broad economic cutoff of China without hurting itself as much, or more. In Command of Commerce, Ben A. Vagle and Stephen G. Brooks show the conventional wisdom is wrong on both fronts. The authors argue that America's economic power has been underestimated because conventional economic measures have ignored America's unprecedented control over the world's largest multinational corporations. They further argue that China's economic power has been overestimated due to Beijing's manipulation of its economic data and measurement issues presented by China's uniquely structured economy. The authors also show Washington could impose massive, disproportionate harm on Beijing if it imposed a broad economic cutoff on China in cooperation with its allies or via a distant naval blockade. Across six scenarios, China's short-term economic losses from a broad cutoff range from being five to eleven times higher than America's. And in the long run, America and almost all its allies would return to previous economic growth levels; in contrast, China's growth would be permanently degraded.

About the author

Ben A. Vagle is a policy analyst at the US Department of the Treasury's Office of Investment Security. Vagle graduated from Dartmouth College, where he was awarded honors in economics and highest honors in government. He also received the Rockefeller Prize in international relations and the Chase Peace Prize for work on his senior thesis, as well as the Economics Department Outstanding Achievement Award. Immediately following his graduation, Vagle worked at Bates White Economic Consulting solving complex data challenges for lawyers and economists. The book Command of Commerce was accepted before Vagle's government service, is based entirely on open sources, and does not necessarily reflect the views of the US Government or US Treasury. Stephen G. Brooks is professor of government at Dartmouth and has previously held fellowships at Harvard and Princeton. He is the author of four books: Producing Security: Multinational Corporations, Globalization, and the Changing Calculus of Conflict; World out of Balance: International Relations and the Challenge of American Primacy (with William Wohlforth); America Abroad: The United States' Global Role in the 21st Century (with William Wohlforth); and Political Economy of Security. He has published numerous articles in journals such as International Security, International Organization, Foreign Affairs, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of Politics, Perspectives on Politics, and Security Studies. He received his PhD in political science with distinction from Yale University, where his dissertation received the American Political Science Association's Helen Dwight Reid Award for the best doctoral dissertation in international relations, law, and politics. Jonathan Strait is a veteran SAG-AFTRA actor with decades of experience in the entertainment industry. He has brought his voice to numerous commercials, promos, video games, ADR, industrials, and audiobooks. Away from the mic he has guest/costarred in dozens of television shows, stage plays, and films. Notable credits include Mad Men, Law & Order, and The Blacklist. Mickey in Hurlyburly and Brick in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof are among his favorite stage roles. He holds a BA in theater arts from The University of Miami and has trained with Terry Schreiber, Milton Katselas, UCB, Jenn Krater, Richard Lawson, and Austin Pendleton, among many others. Jonathan is most excited by characters, choices, and storylines that are uniquely surprising and unexpected, particularly adventure and survival of adverse scenarios.

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