From Publishers Weekly:
This in-depth report by a New York Times national correspondent and a professor of public administration concludes that foreign investment is eroding America's control of its destiny. Foreign-owned banking assets in the U.S. increased from $32 billion in 1973 to $445 billion in 1986; Japanese firms build industrial plants in the South and Midwest, to the delight of hard-pressed state governments; and companies from Hong Kong, Taiwan and Korea maintain 90 offices in Illinois alone, according to the authors, while British investors own massive portions of downtown Washington, D.C., real estate. The Tolchins also document how the U.S. was transformed in four years (1982-86) from the world's largest creditor nation to the largest debtor. While reciprocal American investment abroad is almost totally barred, note the authors, foreign interests have acquired increasing power to influence the U.S. public and affect government policy. "America has been selling off the family jewels to finance the Federal deficit," charges a Congressman quoted here. First serial to New York Times Magazine.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal:
As Martin Tolchin ( New York Times ) and Susan Tolchin (George Washington University) discuss, foreign investment in such areas as agriculture, real estate, and finance is estimated at $1.5 trillion. While this has meant jobs and growth, control of vital sectors of the economy is passing into foreign hands and the integrity of the political process is threatened by lobbying. The Tolchins reveal the impact of foreign capital on our society and examine some policy flaws that have led to "reverse imperialism." An in-depth analysis recommended for academic and public libraries.M. Balachandran, Univ. of Illinois Lib., Urbana-Champaign
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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