China isn’t the world’s most ferocious new economic competitor—the exploding eastcoast
corridor, from Beijing to Shanghai, is. India as a whole is not developing hightech
industries and attracting jobs, but the booming mega-region stretching from
Bangalore to Hyderabad is. Across the world, in fact, nations don’t spur growth so
much as dynamic regions—modern versions of the original “megalopolis,” a term
coined by the geographer Jean Gottman to identify the sprawling Boston–New York–
Washington economic power corridor in the United States.
China isn’t the world’s most ferocious new economic competitor—the exploding eastcoastcorridor, from Beijing to Shanghai, is. India as a whole is not developing hightechindustries and attracting jobs, but the booming mega-region stretching fromBangalore to Hyderabad is. Across the world, in fact, nations don’t spur growth somuch as dynamic regions—modern versions of the original “megalopolis,” a termcoined by the geographer Jean Gottman to identify the sprawling Boston–New York–Washington economic power corridor in the United States.
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