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Post by arfanho7 on Feb 28, 2024 9:03:35 GMT
Those structures grew and were later unified into the imposing structure that exists today. The Great Wall is a great metaphor for the Chinese economy. By empowering regional governments to pursue economic development and rewarding officials on that basis the country as a whole has been transformed into an entrepreneurial and industrial powerhouse. Case in point China s economy enjoyed a sustained growth rate of percent between and and the International Monetary Fund projects that it will overtake the United States as the world s largest Indonesia Mobile Number List economy by the end of . But as the Great Wall exemplifies the great feats of Chinese unity so too does it reflect a tradition of environmental subjugation for national gain. Harvard Business School professor William C. Kirby has long been following and chronicling the rising superpower s complicated relationship with Mother Nature. His new case study China s Environmental at a critical crossroad moving toward leading the world s markets but already number one in pollution by a wide margin. Between and percent of the country s flora for example was endangered by and by around percent of its major rivers were so degraded that they no longer supported aquatic life. Commercial pursuits have exacted heavy environmental tolls and those deferred tolls are starting to come due for a culture not used to paying them.
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