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Three’s Company: How the US and China’s Complementary Competition is Improving African Health
Author(s) -
Sai Polineni
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
pitt political review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2160-5807
DOI - 10.5195/ppr.2014.48
Subject(s) - battle , china , competition (biology) , aside , tanzania , political science , development economics , political economy , economics , history , law , ancient history , socioeconomics , art , ecology , literature , biology
President Obama's and President Xi Jinping's visits to Tanzania — and the associated jubliation and fanfare accompanying them — seem to validate much of what has been written in the past few years of the supposed competition between the United States and China for influence and resources in Africa, with many authors proclaiming that the U.S. was losing this competition. Aside from propagating the idea that Africa is some sort of homogenous collection of people, ideas, and cultures, many of these authors view the role of Africa as primarily an economic battleground in which the U.S and China must battle to determine control while ignoring the fact that the differing strengths and focuses of the American and Chinese economies do not lend themselves to any sort of outright competition in Africa. 

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