June 27, 2024· 48 min

The American Entrepreneurs Who First Opened The Chinese Market

Orality
Model
86%
Highly oral (epic poetry, sermons, hip-hop)

Speaker Breakdown

HostJoe Weisenthal(1,329 words)
M:29%
HostTracy Alloway(1,735 words)
M:94%
GuestElizabeth Ingleson(4,887 words)
M:28%

Oral Indicators

Agonistic50%
basically, absolutely, very
Engagement48%
you, our, your
Memory Aids100%
listen, now, like
Repetition100%
china (115x), trade (68x), like (68x)
Parallelism100%
And I'm Tracy Alloway...., But you're absolutely right...., And I think what's interesting...
Sound Patterns33%
29 question(s), alliteration: "markets move", alliteration: "barclays brief"
Formulaic Phrases5%
i mean, if you will

Literate Indicators

Hedging6%
maybe, could, might
Passive Voice8%
are trained, be critiqued, be historicized
Abstract Nouns21%
investment, overcapacity, inevitability
Subordination6%
because, therefore, while
Sentence Length53%
Avg: 18.3 words/sentence
Word Complexity50%
investment, analyze, anticipate
Academic Markers3%
the literature
Impersonal Style52%
417 personal pronouns found
Descriptive Style90%
basically, absolutely, really

Description

From cars to toys to clothes, we're just used to seeing the label "Made In China" on all sorts of things. But how did China become a go-to destination for manufactured goods in the first place? Who actually recognized that there was a huge opportunity to tap the abundant, low-cost labor to sell goods to Western consumers? On this episode of the podcast we speak with Elizabeth Ingleson, a professor at the London School of Economics and the author of the book Made in China: When US-China Interests Converged to Transform Global Trade. Ingleson traces the roots of the US-China trade relationship to a handful of US entrepreneurs in the early 1970s who first went into the country and recognized its opportunity as an export powerhouse. We discuss who these individuals were, the obstacles they had to overcome, and how they reshaped the entire global economy. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.