1 / 15

China By: Mr. Evans

Unit 3: the Role of China in the current world economy. China By: Mr. Evans. Chinese refusal to change. Since the mid-17 th century, Chinese rulers have refused to adopt western or “American- european ” ways. As a result, Chinese technology fell behind that of Europe. Opium Wars.

alissa
Télécharger la présentation

China By: Mr. Evans

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit 3: the Role of China in the current world economy ChinaBy: Mr. Evans

  2. Chinese refusal to change • Since the mid-17th century, Chinese rulers have refused to adopt western or “American-european” ways. • As a result, Chinese technology fell behind that of Europe.

  3. Opium Wars • British merchants began to trade opium in China in the late 18th century (1700’s) • China tried to hault imports of the highly addictive drug. • In 1839, Britain began to war against China to continue to trade opium. • The British easily defeated the Chinese, because of their advanced techology.

  4. Aftermath of Opium Wars • China had to pay for Britains war debts, open up its harbors for trade, and give up Hong Kong to Great Britain. • Western powers (Europe) carved China up and began controlling it for their own selfish gain.

  5. Spheres of Influence

  6. Rival Groups fight for power • After WWI China was in disorder. • Rival groups began fighting for power • May Fourth Movement: Student movement that supported westernization. • Communists: The communist party is formed. Influenced by Marx & Lenin. • Nationalists: Existing Chinese gov. that had a representative form of government.

  7. Mao Zedung v. Chiang Kai-Shek

  8. Nationalists v. Communists • Civil War would last for 22 years. • Mao Zedung emerged as the communist leader of China. • During WWII the nationalists and communists fought against Japanese invasion of their country. The US supported both sides in this effort.

  9. Communist Victory • In 1949 (after WWII), the communist defeat the nationalist (democracy), and Mao becomes the dictator of the Peoples Republic of China. • Mao won the support of women because he rejected the traditional view point of Confucius (women were inferior to men)

  10. The Great Leap Forward • Finally in 1958, Mao institutes his program to move Chinese technology into the forefront of the world economy ( some fifty years later his vision would come true ). • He also created group communes where several families shared one property to farm. • The Great Leap forward was a failure and led to widespread famine.

  11. China during the cold war • Mao became paranoid of the intelligent people within his own country, so he shut down universities. • The U.S. refused to acknowledge the communist government as the true government of China.

  12. Nixon to China

  13. Mao to Deng • Mao dies in 1976 & Deng becomes dictator of communist China. • Deng promotes foreign trade; thus, increasing China’s economic capacity. • Deng’s Four Modernizations:farming, industry, science & technology, and defense.

  14. Deng’s results • Foreign investment increased • Foreign trade increased • Gap between rich and poor grew • Chinese economy began to show hints of capitalism.

  15. China Today • Chinese economy is one of the fastest growing in the world. • Largest population: 1.3 billion • Hong Kong was given back to China in 1997 • One Child policy • Women not treated equally • Fair trials are uncommon

More Related