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The Post-American World

The Post-American World

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Author: Fareed Zakaria
Publisher: W. W. Norton
Category: Book

List Price: $25.95
Buy New: $13.50
You Save: $12.45 (48%)



New (62) Used (19) Collectible (2) from $13.50

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 152 reviews
Sales Rank: 112

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 6.2 x 1.3

ISBN: 039306235X
Dewey Decimal Number: 303.49
EAN: 9780393062359
ASIN: 039306235X

Publication Date: May 5, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 121-125 of 152



5 out of 5 stars The Post American Review   June 9, 2008
Jean C. Haywood (Boulder, Colorado)
0 out of 2 found this review helpful

The book was sent immediately after ordering it, and I am very satisfied with the procedures followed by Amazon. Also, I am happy with the book and have suggested it to a number of friends who are impressed with Fareed Zakaria.


5 out of 5 stars Excellent Insight   June 9, 2008
Ena Garay (Miami Beach, florida United States)
0 out of 2 found this review helpful

As usual, Zakaria comes through. This book is filled with insight and thoughful analysis.

Zakaria shines when taking meaty topics like international economics and distilling them into concise, clear modules.

The book is simply very interesting with many "aha!" moments. If you like this sort of internatinal pollitics, culture, history and economics, you will love this book.




5 out of 5 stars post american world review   June 7, 2008
Deforest Raphael
0 out of 3 found this review helpful

Haven't read the book yet, but it came in excellent condition and quickly. Thank you very much.


5 out of 5 stars Wrong Title   June 6, 2008
John Mudd Gonzalez (San Juan, Puerto Rico)
1 out of 4 found this review helpful

Mr. Zakaria's new book is an excellent and balanced view of the world at the time he wrote it. It is NOT a book on America's decline. It seems to me the title is more a marketing gimmick than anything else. Actually, the last two chapters of the book are more of a celebration of the nation's strength's than anything else.

The author chronicles the rise of other nations relative to the U.S. and the challanges it faces due to this rise. My only problem with his portrayal is his benevolent view of China's actions in several parts of the world. I believe the Chinese want to challenge America's preminence in the world whereas Mr. Zakaria's view is that they simply want to rise. Yeah, right!

The book is somewhat reminscent of Paul Kennedy's The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, 1500 to the Present, which was interpreted by many in 1987 as the fall of the U.S. Obvioulsy Mr. Kennedy was wrong. Mr. Zakaria, much more artfull, details the challenges facing the nation and concludes that it can handle them, given changes in its policies. Finally, don' miss his program on Sunday's at 1:00 in CNN.



5 out of 5 stars "the rise of the rest"   June 5, 2008
Daniel B. Clendenin (www.journeywithjesus.net)
5 out of 10 found this review helpful

For roughly 300 years two global empires have wielded unilateral influence and control over much of the world -- first Great Britain, and now the United States. But the sun did set on the British Empire, and its successor superpower, says Fareed Zakaria, would do well to learn from history. History "happened" to Britain, and he wonders, "will history happen to America as well? Is it already happening?" While Britain failed economically, it succeeded politically, whereas America faces the opposite challenge; it will maintain its economic clout but must find its place in a changing geo-political landscape.

Zakaria writes "not about the decline of America" but rather, as he repeats throughout his book, "the rise of the rest." Globalization has lifted many boats in many places the last twenty years, creating a diffuse and decentralized economic dynamism throughout much of the world. In 2005, for example, twenty-four of the twenty-five largest IPOs in the world took place outside of America. Three of the world's biggest economies are non-western--China, India and Japan. Taipei boasts the tallest building in the world, but Dubai will soon claim that title. We hear lots about Warren Buffet and Bill Gates, but twenty-two of the twenty-five wealthiest people in the world are not Americans. Brazil has become energy independent, and the UAE can claim "the most richly endowed investment fund." Africa might be the lone exception, but not for long if China continues its vigorous investments and agreements in that resource-rich continent. And it now seems clear that a nation can, despite important disruptions and convulsions, become modern without becoming western; never mind that many places want to become more like the west.

China and India, of course, are the prime examples of new found economic power, and Zakaria devotes a chapter to each of them. China's economy has grown 9% every year since Deng Xiaoping green-lighted economic capitalism (if not political liberalism). The economy has doubled every eight years in that time. Today they export more in a single day than they did in all of 1978. They've lifted 400 million people out of poverty. India boasts similar examples even though it started ten years later; Bollywood beats Hollywood in terms of movies made and tickets sold.

And America? It's far and away still the lone superpower, and that won't change soon. In economics, technology, science, and even education it remains the envy of the world. India, Zakaria reminds us, graduates about 50 PhDs a year in computer science; the United States graduates about 1,000. Militarily, the United States spends more than the rest of the world combined. What's crippling America, Zakaria says, is a politics which has become highly dysfunctional and little more than theater. We've become insular and isolated in an economically decentralized world, "clueless about the world we're supposed to be running." Even worse, while we're still the sole superpower, we've lost our legitimacy. In his final twenty-five pages Zakaria offers six guidelines whereby America can become the world's honest broker of the universal ideals that it espouses. But this requires a new spirit of "consultation, cooperation, and even compromise," and the jury is out whether we're willing or able to assume such a new role in a world that, because of the "rise of the rest," is already post--American.


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