Barely nine months after China joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) on December 11, 2001, I sat at a U.S.-China Business Council luncheon in Beijing featuring U.K. journalist Joe Studwell speak on his book The China Dream: The Elusive Quest for the Greatest Untapped Market on Earth.
China may dream of a different world in which the yuan ranks alongside the dollar, euro, sterling and yen as a reserve currency.
The school is one of the few American colleges that is a household name in China, and many Chinese parents dream of enrolling their children there.
There is an age-old dream of linking India and China through Burma.
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However, in writing my newly-released book, The Chinese Dream, I traveled all over China and spoke to hundreds of people.
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The so-called American dream seems to be alive and well in China, but brands that miss the fundamental difference in emotions and motivations are not likely to be successful.
The ballet draws inspiration from the Dream of the Red Chamber, considered one of China's four great classical novels, written in the 18th Century by Cao Xueqin.
It is my hope that it will not only serve as a bridge between China and the West, but also start an important conversation about the Chinese Dream.
In my book The Chinese Dream, I urge people in the West to see the differences between China and the West as complementary rather than contradictory.
The dream is to make a fraction of the fortunes made from early deals with China startups Baidu and Tencent.
Their dream was to establish a small inn and cultural center where visitors might experience China as it was before the onslaught of industrialization and tourism.
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