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Rise of China and India

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Rise of China and India
Sam Schneider
Student number: s2919337
Question being answered: Does the rise of china and India pose a threat to the American power
Tutor name: Daniel Ringuet

Since the early stages of the 1940 America has risen to power and stayed in power. To date America is considered the only true world super power. In the past the Roman Empire, Greek and Egyptian were all very dominating but even then there were challenging dynasty so they can’t be called a ‘super power’. In today’s society the world has two more economies forcing their way to the top, these two economies are China’s and India’s. The question being answered in this essay is: ‘does the rise of developing countries like China and India pose a serious challenge to US power?’ I believe yes, mainly because for so long the world has revolved around the American economy and with the rise of these two countries America will gradually start to lose its power. This essay will also address both China’s and India’s relatively quick rise to power over the last 25 years.

Before I discuss this more in-depth it is important to understand what exactly a ‘superpower is’, a superpower can be defined as: “a country that has a say in every corner of the globe and without whose say nothing truly substantial can be achieved in any such corner”- (Grymyko 2011).

America ended the 20th century as the sole unchallenged world superpower, in the 21st century however it started a little differently. America’s military power has remained dominant; they have to decline in certain areas such as wealth and information. The Wealth and information has shifted dramatically to the east in particular to China. Schmemann (2011) argues that there is in fact a huge power shift occurring and America may no longer be the dominating state, the power will move to Countries such as China and India if things continue going the way they’re going. This has been called the shift from the west to the east. Mahbubani (2011) argues that America

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