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This book argues that the true competition between the United States and China is not over geopolitical dominance, but over who can more effectively resolve the internal contradictions of capitalism. As both nations face mounting economic and technological pressures-from artificial intelligence and automation to biotechnology and global inequality-this provocative work reframes the US-China rivalry as a shared struggle to transcend capitalism itself.Rather than portraying China and the US as ideological opposites, the book reveals how both are navigating the same systemic crises. It revisits the once-dismissed slogan 'Only socialism can save China' and reexamines China's transformation from Maoist socialism to market-driven growth. While China's post-Mao development model sparked an unprecedented economic boom, it also deepened the country's entanglement with global capitalism, raising urgent questions about its future direction.Combining economic analysis with insights into technological disruption, the book offers a compelling rationale for socialism-rooted not in ideology, but in the material realities of our time. It envisions a post-capitalist civilization in which global leadership is defined not by dominance within capitalism, but by the capacity to move beyond it.
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This book argues that the true competition between the United States and China is not over geopolitical dominance, but over who can more effectively resolve the internal contradictions of capitalism. As both nations face mounting economic and technological pressures-from artificial intelligence and automation to biotechnology and global inequality-this provocative work reframes the US-China rivalry as a shared struggle to transcend capitalism itself.Rather than portraying China and the US as ideological opposites, the book reveals how both are navigating the same systemic crises. It revisits the once-dismissed slogan 'Only socialism can save China' and reexamines China's transformation from Maoist socialism to market-driven growth. While China's post-Mao development model sparked an unprecedented economic boom, it also deepened the country's entanglement with global capitalism, raising urgent questions about its future direction.Combining economic analysis with insights into technological disruption, the book offers a compelling rationale for socialism-rooted not in ideology, but in the material realities of our time. It envisions a post-capitalist civilization in which global leadership is defined not by dominance within capitalism, but by the capacity to move beyond it.